Strawberry Icebox Cheesecake is a light and fluffy no-bake dessert with fresh strawberries and a graham cracker crust. Be sure to give my Woolworth Icebox Cheesecake Recipe a try for the classic dessert that has a hint of lemon flavor.

Fork Taking Bite of Strawberry Icebox Cheesecake

Strawberry Icebox Cheesecake

This recipe is based on my Icebox Cheesecake Recipe, direct from Woolworths. The Woolworth department store started out as a five-and-dime store, selling things that only cost 5 or 10 cents. Eventually, the lunch counter was an added attraction. The difference in this Strawberry flavored Icebox Cheesecake is using strawberry jello mix (instead of lemon) and a layer of freshly sliced strawberries.

Jello Strawberry Cheesecake Ingredients

There are two parts to this no-bake dessert–the graham cracker crust and the light and fluffy strawberry-flavored filling.

Graham Crackers: You can buy graham cracker crumbs to use for the crust (about 2 cups). Or, you could crush sheets of graham crackers. You will need about 11 full sheets of graham crackers for 2 cups of crumbs.

Cream Cheese: Be sure the cream cheese is at room temperature when creaming with the sugar.

Evaporated Milk: Evaporated milk is super-concentrated milk that helps give the dessert filling its creamy texture. It should not be confused with sweetened condensed milk, which has added sugar. They should not be used interchangeably in recipes. Be sure to place the can of evaporated milk in the freezer, along with the bowl and whisk attachment of a stand mixer.

Strawberries: Thinly slice the strawberries before adding them on top of the crust.

Adding Filling to Strawberry Icebox Cheesecake

Do I Have to Freeze Icebox Cheesecake?

Nope! You don’t have to freeze this dessert, even with Icebox in the name. In fact, an icebox used to refer to a non-mechanical ‘refrigerator’ before we had electric refrigerators. So, you do have to store the cheesecake in the refrigerator (covered, for up to a week), but no need to make room in your freezer. The only freezing needed with this recipe is to chill the bowl and whisk attachment of a stand mixer, along with the evaporated milk.

Adding Whipped Cream to Strawberry Icebox Cheesecake

What if My Evaporated Milk Does Not Form Peaks?

If you looked at the recipe below, you may notice the first instruction is to chill the bowl of a stand mixer, the whisk attachment, and the can of evaporated milk.

If you are finding that the evaporated milk is not forming peaks, you can place the entire bowl with the contents into the freezer for 15-30 minutes and then re-whip. You’ll know it is ready to whip again when there are ice crystals on the bowl. Do not leave it longer than 30 minutes.

Evaporated milk has a lower fat content compared to whipping cream, so it’s harder to whip. This is why chilling is so important.

Strawberry Icebox Cheesecake in a Pan

How Does it Taste?

Heaven. Seriously! It is light as air and melts into a velvety cloud of creamy deliciousness in your mouth. It’s almost like a “strawberry cloud cheesecake”. This dessert is worth making and there is a reason the original Woolworth Icebox Cheesecake is so famous.

Piece of Strawberry Icebox Cheesecake on a Plate with Fork

Creamy No Bake Desserts

4.75 from 4 votes

Strawberry Woolworth Icebox Cheesecake

Prep Time 15 minutes
Chill 12 hours 30 minutes
Total Time 12 hours 45 minutes
Strawberry Woolworth Icebox Cheesecake is a light and fluffy no-bake dessert with fresh strawberries and a graham cracker crust.

Ingredients

Crust

  • 2 cups (14-16 sheets, 168 g) honey graham crackers, finely crushed
  • 1 tablespoon granulated sugar
  • ½ cup (1 stick / 113g) butter, melted
  • 1 pound strawberries, thinly sliced

Filling

  • 1 block (8 ounces) cream cheese, room temperature
  • 1 cup (200 g) granulated sugar
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla
  • 1 box (3 ounces) strawberry jello mix
  • ½ cup boiling water, 212°F
  • ½ cup cold water, 55°F
  • 1 can (12 ounces) evaporated milk, chilled in the freezer

Topping

  • whipped cream, for garnish

Instructions

  • Chill the bowl of a stand mixer and the whisk attachment in the freezer, along with the can of evaporated milk.

Crust

  • Spray a 9×13-inch baking dish with nonstick cooking spray.
  • In a medium bowl, add graham crackers and sugar and mix together.
  • Add melted butter and mix until all ingredients are fully incorporated (no dry spots).
  • Press the crumbs firmly into the bottom of the prepared baking dish.
  • Top the crust with a single layer of sliced strawberries. Set aside.

Filling

  • In a medium bowl cream together cream cheese and sugar with a hand mixer. Add vanilla and mix until well blended (2-3 minutes). Set aside.
  • In a separate small bowl, add jello and boiling water. Mix until sugar dissolves. Add cold water and chill it in the refrigerator while you prepare the rest, but do not let the gelatin set.
  • To a stand mixer, add the chilled bowl and whisk attachment. Add the evaporated milk and mix until peaks form. Add jello mixture and continue to whisk for 30 more seconds.
  • Add cream cheese mixture and whisk for 30 more seconds.
  • Pour mixture into the pan. Place in the refrigerator to chill overnight.
  • When ready to serve, top with whipped cream.

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Meet Amanda Rettke

Amanda Rettke is the creator of I Am Baker, and the bestselling author of Surprise Inside Cakes: Amazing Cakes for Every Occasion – With a Little Something Extra Inside.Over the course of her 15+ year blogging adventure, she has been featured in and collaborated with the Food Network, New York Times, LA Times, Country Living Magazine, People Magazine, Epicurious, Brides, Romantic Homes, life:beautiful, Publishers Weekly, The Daily Mail, Star Tribune, The Globe and Mail, DailyCandy, YumSugar, The Knot, The Kitchn, and Parade, to name a few.

Reader Comments

    1. I’m trying to think what my aunt made. Graham crackers was the crust. Philidelphia creme cheese mixed with strawberry jello. Evaporated milk I think a little vanilla extract pored into the pan and then what graham crackers was left sprinkle on top and refrigurate

  1. I followed all the instructions, even freezing the bowl and severely chilling the evaporated milk…. It still never ‘set’. Came out a soupy mess when trying to cut it. The flavor was good…

    1. So sorry that the recipe didn’t seem to work for you! Do you mean it never “set” after the overnight refrigeration? That probably means the evaporated milk wasn’t whipped to soft peaks.

  2. Hello! Can i whip the evap milk ahead of creamcheese and put in fridge? I only have 1 mixing bowl.. if i do the creaming first my bowl wont be cold enough for the milk. 💖

  3. Can I substitute heavy whipping cream for the evaporated milk? I’m on vacation and trying not to go back to the store, lol!

  4. First time was a soupy fail bc I didn’t put the evaporated milk in the freezer. My fault.
    Second time i followed the instructions completely and it was so so good.

    Follow instructions ppl and it will work out!

  5. Made this yesterday and it took will power not to eat all of it. The strawberry portion is melt in your mouth delicious.

    Thinking of just making the mousse part when I don’t have crackers. Maybe I’ll try different flavors of jello. On a hot day, I’m thinking of this made with lime jello.

  6. I froze fresh picked strawberries whole individually. Can I defrost and slice and use in this cheesecake?

    1. Hi Christine – you can. However, the strawberries will be a bit mushier after being thawed. So it might not be as pretty, but it will still taste delicious!

      1. pie will not set because jello use to come in 4oz box along time ago this is a old recipe jello now comes in 3 oz box add 2 tbsp more to make it 4oz

        1. the sugar should say superfine sugar
          to make superfine sugar put granulated sugar in food processor or blender and blend
          to make sugar finer

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