This chocolate cheese pie was my brother’s favorite pie, and he always requested it for his birthday dessert. Read on to learn more about the wonderful person my brother Greg was and to get the recipe for his pie. It truly is delicious. Several people have contacted me to tell me they made it in his honor, and I am always so touched by these messages.

Enjoy this pie that is part cheesecake and part chocolate pie. And read about Greg, because as long as there are people to remember him and hear his story, he will live on.

For ease of browsing, you can find all my pie recipes in one place, and cheesecakes live here. Let’s get to it.

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A collage of photographs of my brother and me, taken from overhead, with the uncut chocolate cheesecake pie towards the top of the frame.

Chocolate Cheese Pie, At a Glance

You can make this pie simply, or you can get more complicated. For example, you can make your own fudge layer from scratch, or you can buy store-bought fudge. It’s up to you.

As written, here’s an overview of the pie:

✅Skill Level: Intermediate
✅Skills: Making a Crumb Crust, Simple cheesecake batter, fudge sauce, baking
✅Type: Layered Pie
✅Number of Ingredients: 8
✅Prep Time: 1 hour
✅Cook Time: 1 hour, 5-10 minutes
✅Yield: 12 slices, but you may want to cut smaller slices. It’s very rich!

Most of this post is about my brother. If you prefer, you can Jump Straight to the Recipe

What Might Have Been

My brother would have turned forty-six today. I am certain that he would still be living in Charlotte, so we would have driven over and had a wonderful meal with my mom and dad, him and his wife and kids. We’d have played with his dogs—he surely would have had two or three—and checked out his newest gadgets.

He would have worshiped at the Apple alter. Or maybe he would have been an Android guy. Google Glass? He’d have loved it. He would have had the newest, most bleeding edge technology that he could hunt down.

Greg never had the chance to be the wonderful father and husband that I know he would have been. My brother only lived to see thirty-one birthdays, and he was sick for the last three that we celebrated together.

Closure? Is There Such a Thing?

We grew up in a household where if you didn’t talk about the bad things and just pretended everything was copacetic, then things would be copacetic. We lived by The Law of Attraction’s more pessimistic cousins, The Laws of Selective Attention and Willful Ignorance.

All during Greg’s illness, we never discussed—or at least the two of us never discussed—the “what if you don’t make it” scenario. We hung out on Friday nights, watching movies and listening to Guns N Roses. To this day, I cannot hear Paradise City without thinking of my brother and the whiplash I used to give myself doing the Axel Shuffle, whipping my head around and belting into one of the handles of Greg’s nunchucks.

Even towards the end, when he no longer had the strength to tie his own shoes and his vision was deteriorating, we never had The Conversation.

Even when the head of the bone marrow transplant team stopped visiting him to see how he was doing because he was obviously going to be just another casualty along the road to better and more successful bone marrow transplants, a data point on a graph, we still talked about the future and ended every conversation with “I’ll talk to you tomorrow.”

A photo of a girl and a boy sitting together on a carpet-covered bench. Taken in 1971.

Were we being optimistic, or were we intentionally avoiding what was looming? I think the latter. Part of me wishes that we had had some closure.

A frank discussion, an exchanging of I love yous and a chance to say how much I would miss him when he was gone.

I would like to have that conversation locked away in my memory so I could take it out on occasion and look at it in the light.

The New Car

Just a short few months before he died, he bought a new car. We were all stunned and heartened by the apparent optimism that purchase signaled. His choice was between a sweet little BMW 325i and a Bonneville.

I scratched my head when he drove home the Bonneville, but once he was gone, it became obvious to me that he made his choice with my mom in mind. He must have known she wouldn’t have felt comfortable in the small BMW, so he bought her car and broke it in for her.

She still drives that Bonneville. I think she always will. (Mom now drives an Elantra. She kept the Bonneville for years and years, but she finally let it go.)

I Was a Sister. I Am a Sister.

Memorial Tattoo for Greg of a guitar and text reading "I hope you had the time of your life!".

Driving back to my parents’ house from the hospital on that last day, I remember so many good, Southern people were already at our house, chatting in hushed tones and waiting for us to come home so they could place aluminum foil-wrapped tins and trays into our hands along with the damp-eyed and heartfelt Oh we are so sorry’s.

I found myself in a conversation with a few folks in which we quietly debated which was worse: someone cut down in an instant, or someone who lingers and whose life slowly leaks out, like water from a rusted bucket. We decided that neither way was good.

I found out later that those people had no idea who I was. I was Greg’s sister for all of his 31 years. That is who I was.

That is still who I am, even after all this time.

The first few times I dreamed about my brother after he died, he had That Look about him. The simultaneously bloated and emaciated look of cancer patients on steroids. His hair was stubble. There was still a huge, sutured scar on one side of his head where the surgeons had gone in to try to understand why he was blind.

They never did find an obvious cause.

When I finally was able to dream past the shell of his illness and see Greg as he was before his diagnosis, I woke up smiling. And now, when I see him in dreams, he always looks as he did before I had to learn that BMT didn’t mean Behavior Management Technician but Bone Marrow Transplant.

The vocabulary of cancer is learned quickly, and while numb, but that is another story which has nothing to do with food for the body or for the soul.

My Brother, the Self-Taught Cook

A slice of chocolate cheesecake pie and a fork on a plate with the rest of the pie on a pedestal and a photo of my brother and me in the background.

Greg was a great cook, and he helped me learn to cook. I hosted a huge dinner party in my little crack house of a duplex once for which I had made an enormous vat of sauce for manicotti. I kept tasting it and adding herbs and tasting it and adding pepper and tasting it and adding wine, and it just tasted…muddy. I called Greg in a panic and asked him to stop by on his way home from work to tell me what he thought.

He walked in, took a taste, rolling the thick red sauce around in his mouth as if he were a professional sommelier, and said, “It needs sugar.”

He was right, too.

We used to make elaborate, multi-course meals for mom and dad for Mother’s Day and Father’s Day. We’d go to the library and find exotic cookbooks and copy the recipes we wanted to make, and then we’d make them. He was the chef. I was his sous.

The Chocolate Cheese Pie: A Magical Pie

Close up shot of a slice of cheesecake pie with fudge sauce, head on, on a plate with a blue striped napkin in the background.

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Greg never asked for cake on his birthday. For years, his birthday cake was pie. Mrs. Cornwell’s Chocolate Cheese Pie. Two parts cheesecake, one part fudge sauce and one part sweetened sour cream topping adding up to one flavorful, rich, sexy pie.

I always looked forward to his birthday dinners because I knew they would end with That Pie. Now that he is gone, if I’m going to be at Mom and Dad’s for my birthday and she asks me what I’d like for my birthday dessert, I always ask for Greg’s pie.

What do you want for your birthday dessert? Chocolate cheesecake pie. Always.

Today, I make this chocolate cheese pie in memory of Greg. Of his friendship and his kind, steady, gentle spirit. I love you, brother, and while I most often think about you with a smile, I will miss you for the rest of my life.

I’d love it if you would make one, too. Here’s how:

How to Make a Chocolate Cheese Pie

Here are the ingredients you’ll need. Some are used more than once in different components:

Labeled images of the ingredients for chocolate cheese pie arranged on a white background: chocolate Grahams, fine salt, instant coffee, butter, cream cheese, eggs, sugar, vanilla, dark chocolate, corn syrup, and sour cream.

For the Crust

  • Chocolate Grahams: Feel free to sub regular Graham crackers, vanilla wafers, or make a chocolate sable crust
  • salt: Just a pinch. Fine or kosher will work
  • instant coffee: optional, but deepens the chocolate flavor
  • butter: to hold the crust together and allow it to get crisp. Butter also carries flavor

Jenni Says: I don’t usually add sugar to a crumb crust. If you like your crusts a bit sweeter, add a tablespoon or two of sugar

For the Cheesecake layer

This is a very basic cheesecake layer. It’s also very delicious!

  • cream cheese: provides the body, bulk, and tang for the mixture
  • eggs: allows the cream cheese custard to set
  • sugar: sweetens the cream cheese layer
  • salt: brings the flavors into focus
  • vanilla: Rounds out all the flavors

Jenni Says: You can double this layer whenever you want a basic and rich cheesecake. As written, this layer is about an inch thick when baked in a 10″ pie pan.

For the Fudge layer

This fudge layer is basically a ganache with a few extra flavorings. You can also use straight-up ganache, my hot fudge recipe, or jarred fudge sauce.

  • heavy cream: The liquid for the sauce. You can also use regular whipping cream
  • corn syrup: For body. This is an optional ingredient
  • dark chocolate: 60%-70% cocoa solids will work best here. Good quality chocolate chips are fine as well
  • instant coffee: optional. Adds depth to the chocolate flavor
  • vanilla: Rounds out all the flavors
  • salt: Brings the flavors into focus

For the sour cream layer

This is one of my favorite things ever. Sweetened sour cream is the best. When baked for just a few minutes, it sets up and is sliceable. At room temperature, it makes an excellent fruit dip!

  • sour cream: Adds the most delicious, tangy dairy flavor
  • salt: Brings all the flavors into focus
  • sugar: For the prettiest appearance, use white sugar. Brown sugar will give you a bit more flavor, but it won’t make a pale white layer. It’s entirely your call. It will be great either way
  • vanilla: Rounds out all the flavors

Procedure

A half-eaten slice of chocolate cheesecake pie with a bite on the fork.
Cheesecake, fudge sauce and sweetened sour cream all tucked into a chocolate crust. The best pie in all the land.

In a nutshell, this is how you make this pie:

  1. Make and bake the crust.
  2. Mix up the cheesecake layer, pour into the crust, and bake.
  3. Make the fudge layer and spread over the still-warm pie.
  4. Whisk all the sour cream topping ingredients together, carefully spread over the fudge layer, and bake another few minutes to set the topping.

Cool, then chill for at least 6 hours before slicing and serving. Store leftovers in the fridge for up to 5 days.

For best flavor and texture, allow the slices to sit out for about 45 minutes before serving.

Equipment

You will need to make this pie in a 9/5″ deep dish pie pan. This is what it is scaled for. If you only have standard pie pans, make 2 smaller pies, dividing all the layers evenly between two pie pans. You will need to make extra crust mixture, though.

Jenni's Pick
Set of 2 Pyrex 9.5" Glass Pie Pans

This larger size of pie pan makes a generous apple pie or chocolate cheese pie. This size pie pan will work especially well for "deep dish" recipes and are a nice size to make for a crowd.

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Questions?

If you have any questions about this post or recipe, I am happy to help.

Simply leave a comment here and I will get back to you soon. I also invite you to ask question in my Facebook group, Fearless Kitchen Fun.

If your question is more pressing, please feel free to email me. I should be back in touch ASAP, as long as I’m not asleep.

A Note About Measurements

My recipes are almost all written by weight, including liquids, unless otherwise specified.

For accuracy and consistency of results, I encourage you to buy–and use–a kitchen scale.

I promise that baking and cleanup will be so much quicker and easier.

This is the scale that I recommend for home use. I have owned and used one for years.

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04/02/2025 08:53 am GMT

Love This Chocolate Cheese Pie? Please Rate and Review. Thanks!

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a slice of chocolate cheesecake pie

Chocolate Cheese Pie Recipe

Jennifer Field
This chocolate cheese pie is exceedingly rich. And exceedingly tasty. You might be tempted to slice yourself a large wedge, but please don't. Cut a small wedge and enjoy every single bite. You will absolutely need a deep dish, 9 1/2" pie pan to make this pie. If you don't have one, you could certainly make this in a 9" or 10" spring-form pan.
4.93 from 13 votes
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Prep Time 1 hour
Cook Time 1 hour 5 minutes
Total Time 2 hours 5 minutes
Course Cheesecake Recipes
Cuisine American
Servings 12
Calories 575 kcal

Ingredients

For the Crust

  • 2 cups chocolate graham cracker crumbs (I used cute bear-shaped Teddy Grahams)
  • 1 ½ teaspoons espresso powder
  • heavy pinch of fine sea salt
  • 4 oz melted butter

For the Cheesecake

  • 2 8 oz blocks cream cheese softened
  • 4 large eggs
  • ¾ cup to 1 cup sugar (to taste)
  • ¼ teaspoon fine sea salt or to taste
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla paste or 1 Tablespoon vanilla extract

For the Fudge

  • 6 oz heavy cream
  • 1 Tablespoon corn syrup
  • 6 oz 60% chocolate chopped finely (or your favorite dark chocolate or chocolate chips)
  • 1 teaspoon espresso powder
  • ½ teaspoon vanilla paste or 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • pinch of fine sea salt

For the Sour Cream Topping

  • 1 ½ cups sour cream
  • ¾ cup sugar
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla paste or 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • scant 1/4 teaspoon fine sea salt

Instructions
 

For the Crust

  • Whir up the cookies in the food processor along with the espresso powder and salt. Make sure the crumbs are nice and fine.
  • Drizzle in the melted butter and process again for a few seconds until the butter is evenly distributed.
  • Press evenly in the bottom and all the way up the sides of a deep dish pie pan (or a good 2″ up the sides of your spring form).
  • Bake at 350F for about 10 minutes. Set aside to cool.

For the Cheesecake

  • On low speed, beat the cream cheese until smooth.
  • Add the sugar, and continue to beat until smooth.
  • Add the eggs, salt and vanilla and mix until well incorporated.
  • Pour into your pie crust and bake until all but the very center is set, about 45 minutes.

For the Fudge Sauce

  • Bring the cream, corn syrup and salt just to a boil.
  • Pour over the chocolate and vanilla. Let sit for a minute or two.
  • Whisk slowly until your ganache is lovely and emulsified.
  • Pour/spread evenly onto your just-out-of-the-oven cheesecake.

For the Sour Cream Topping

  • Whisk all ingredients together. Let sit for about 5 minutes so the sugar can dissolve.
  • Whisk again and check to make sure the sour cream mixture is smooth.
  • Carefully spread on top of the fudge sauce, trying not to mix the two layers.
  • Put the pie back in the oven for another 5-10 minutes to set the sour cream.
  • Let cool to room temperature and then chill at least 6 hours or overnight before slicing and serving.

Did You Make Any Changes?

Notes

I’ve done a bit of tinkering to the original pie. The original does not call for any espresso powder. It also calls for a vanilla wafer crust, half as much cheesecake filling, and a jar of fudge sauce for the fudgey part. Feel free to make this either way.
 
In the updated photos, I baked the pie in a 9″ push pan, and it worked out beautifully. Think of it more as a shorter cheesecake than a pie. It works just as well in a deep dish pie pan. If you want to make it in a regular, shallow pie pan, make half as much cheesecake mixture and you should be fine.

Nutrition

Calories: 575kcalCarbohydrates: 47gProtein: 6gSaturated Fat: 22gCholesterol: 151mgSodium: 339mgFiber: 1gSugar: 37g
Keyword chocolate cheese pie, chocolate cheesecake pie, chocolate pie, pie
Did you make this recipe?Please tell us what you loved!

Consider making this chocolate cheesecake pie in honor of someone you love. It is truly excellent. Greg did have impeccable taste.

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107 Comments

  1. How beautifully written, Jenni. I feel like I knew your brother even though I never met him! I know he would love the tradition of his favorite pie being carried out in his honor. Your family was blessed to have had him for the years you did and the memories you now have. I believe you will be reunited someday!

  2. That was so beautifully written! I’m having a hard time writing this
    through the tears. Last year was very hard for me as my Dad had so many
    health issues and setbacks. Then he was gone at the end of October. I
    was able to spend a lot of time with he and my mom through all of that
    but it has been hard missing him and remembering all of our hopes that
    he would get better and would get to go back home again. But it was not
    to be and my Mom is alone at the house. They were married for 62 1/2
    years. They were best friends. It is so hard when loved ones go to
    heaven and leave us here to miss them. Hugs to you and thanks for
    sharing this. You did a beautiful job of sharing. He sounds like a great
    person, just like you!

    1. Oh, wow, Elaine. I am so sorry for your loss, too. My Uncle Ray just died yesterday. He and Auntie Ev were married for 66 years. She died three years ago, and I know they are now reunited. I’m sure he missed her terribly while they were apart. I know your parents will be together again one day.

      Thank you for your lovely comment. My brother really was the best. <3

  3. I love the tattoo. I love you. And I know I would have loved your brother.

    I send you all the love in the world on this day, and hope it makes it a little less rough. Even though I know deep down nothing really helps on these days. Just know he would be so uber proud of his sis.

    You’re a special lady Jenni. Thanks for revealing more of yourself to us. It’s not easy to put your heart out there for the world to see but you did it beautifully. xx

    1. And I love you right back. I know you have your own hard days, so you know what it’s like. The funny thing is that, once I put this out there, I realize that almost everyone has at least one of Those Days. Somehow knowing that just makes it easier.

      Thank you, Kim. I’m glad I know you. <3

  4. What you wrote really touched me. We can all learn from your story and thanks to Greg we can all experience this awesome pie. Thank you.

  5. I so understand the desire to have had “the” conversation with your brother. I never did with my late husband either, except to finally tell him it was okay to ‘let go’ at which time he let go of my hand : ) Not exactly what I meant, he died later that evening. My family, never spoke about the dreaded “C”. Funny too about your brother buying a car that your mother would ultimately drive. My husband bought a house! Which I lived in for close to 20 years before moving on.

    Thinking of you as you go through today reliving those special moments. Oh…my dad always puts sugar in his spaghetti/meat sauce!

    Jo-Anne

    1. Oh, Jo-Anne, it is so nice to know that there are always folks out there who understand. 🙂

      I am very sorry for your loss. I know it was long ago, but still…

      A spoonful of sugar can help a lot of things!

  6. Beautifully said Jenni, Greg was lucky to have you and you him. The spirit of memories do last lifetimes even if the physical world fails us. I agree he would have been a great dad and husband and you the fun and awesome Aunt Jenni. Thank you for sharing yours and Greg’s stories. May the blessings of that love shared between a brother and sister continue to be a source of strength and grace throughout your and your family’s lives. Love you! Sister Susan ; )

  7. You are breaking my heart. Such an aching hole our loved ones leave. Thank God for the good memories because they mean we can go on. If only to keep remembering.

    1. Thank you, Alejandra! It was a difficult one to write because I wanted it to be perfect. The wonderful Jamie Schler helped me edit it. And yes, you must make the pie. It is ridiculous! =)

  8. I have purposely been avoiding reading this post my friend. I knew it was going to be so beautiful that I’d cry, and I did 😉 So beautiful and touching Jenni. You’re such a fantastic and amazing writer and I know you have made Greg proud today. You’re such a wonderful and sweet sister/daughter/wife/friend/chocolate cheese pie maker 🙂 Sending *BIG HUGS* <3 Ps….LOVE the tattoo, and I am totally making this Chocolate Cheese Pie very soon 😉

    1. I actually thought about you before I published this, Niki! I was thinking, “Oh, I hope I don’t break my friend Niki with this post!” <3

      Thank you for always being so supportive and wonderful, and I'm so glad you love the tattoo. I got it about 6-7 years ago as a memorial, and I love it too.

      And you will totally love the pie, whether you make it the way I wrote it or follow the original (in the notes). So good!

      1. You’re so sweet. 😉 Every time you posted something about this blog post, and that it was on it’s way, I was like “No, I can’t do this!” lol! But of course I am here in support and loved it 🙂 Well done friend. And I think I’m going to attempt this beautiful pie on Sunday, Mmm Mmm 😉

  9. Sissy, amazing lovely wonderful post. It of course left me sobbing, reading through tear-filled eyes.
    I love you with my whole heart and sending you the biggest hugs imaginable.

    1. Aw, Sissy! I’m all sobby, too. And I really don’t want to be–I want to eat yummy pie in Greg’s memory and share it with my Sissy! Greg would’ve loved you and heartily approved of your adoption! <3

      Love you so much!

  10. Jennifer, Thank you for sharing this touching story. Your brother was lucky to have a loving sister who continues to honor his memory. Many can relate to “the conversation” that one never has with a dying loved one. We don’t want them to know they are soon to leave us even though they do know. It’s just understood. Enjoy the beautiful memories of your brother today.

  11. Jenni,
    the way your family recognizes optimism keeps the connection alive, but no more
    so than this tribute—a pie to cherish in the light of a loved one.

  12. What a beautiful tribute to your dear brother! I will be remembering you as I bake my daughter’s birthday cake today.

4.93 from 13 votes (5 ratings without comment)

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