Review
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"The best cheesecake for purists." —Bon Appétit
"Intensely flavored, it is creamy without being too heavy. . . a local product making a national reputation because it
is one of the best." —The New York Times
"A Chicago legend and deservingly so." —the Chicago Tribune
"Slice of Heaven. . . this cheesecake is perfection on a plate." —Oprah Winfrey
"Eli's Cheesecake, long celebrated in Chicago and now nationwide." —Parade magazine
"A Chicago institution and a world wide ambassador of the City's culinary scene." —City of Chicago Mayors Office
"Guaranteed to satisfy the most ardent chocolate fan." —Cooks Magazine
"King of Cheesecake." —Chicago Sun-Times
"It’s the best. . . it's like deep dish pizza except sweet." —Roe Conn, 89 WLS Radio, ABC7's Windy City Live
"Chicago's #1 Cheesecake." —NewCity
About the Author
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Maureen Schulman is an award-winning publicist and a photographer who has been a part of the Eli’s cheesecake story
since the beginning, when along with her her-in-law, Eli Schulman, and husband, Marc Schulman, she helped launch
Eli's cheesecake at the first Taste of Chicago in 1980. She is director of public relations of The Eli's Cheesecake
Company, serves as president of the board of The Happiness Club, sits on the board of the Magnificent Mile Foundation,
and is a presidential appointee to the board of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. She
lives in Chicago with her family.
Jolene Worthington, executive vice president of The Eli’s Cheesecake Company, has lectured on creating premium
cheesecake at the American Institute of Baking and on the history of cheesecake before the Culinary Historians of
Chicago, and trains young artisan bakers through the Eli’s Cheesecake Bakery. Before joining Eli’s in 1984, she wrote
the “Cooks Tools” column for the Chicago Tribune, served as culinary consultant for the Time-Life cookbook series “Good
Cooks,” and wrote for Cuisine magazine. She is a member of the board of Slow Foods Chicago, has served on the governing
board for the Cooking and Hospitality Institute of Chicago, and is a board member and mentor for the Chicago High School
for Agricultural Sciences. She lives in Chicago, IL.
Tara Lane is an award-winning pastry chef and a culinary innovation consultant. She apprenticed at New York’s François
Payard before garnering national accl as the executive pastry chef at the restaurants Blackbird and Avec in Chicago.
She earned a bachelor’s degree in fine art from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a master’s degree in
design methods from the Illinois Institute of Technology, and trained at Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts in
Portland. She also worked as a food preservationist at the Jane Addams Hull-House Museum, where she focused on food
advocacy and policy issues. She lives outside of Austin, TX.
Diana Moles is vice president of research and development at Eli’s Cheesecake Company, where she oversees Eli’s chefs
and bakers in developing new products. Her received her professional training at the American Institute of Baking and
the Culinary Institute of America. She also teaches pastry classes in the greater Chicago area. She lives in Chicago,
IL.
Peter McCullough is CEO of McCulloughPhoto, a photography firm specializing in architecture, commercial design, and
concept photography. Originally from Belfast, Northern Ireland, he began his career as chef at the award-winning
McMasters, and was executive sous chef at the Kensington Hilton in London and the Chicago Hilton and Towers. He lives in
Chicago, IL.
Born and raised and still living in Chicago, Rick Kogan has worked for the Chicago Daily News, Chicago Sun-Times, and
the Chicago Tribune, where he is currently a senior writer and columnist. Named Chicago's Best Reporter in 1999 and
inducted into the Chicago Journalism Hall of Fame in 2003, he is the creator and host of WGN radio's "Sunday Papers with
Rick Kogan" and the author of a dozen books.