Everything you eat at The Cheesecake Factory is made in-house, except for its most iconic dish

The Cheesecake Factory prepares its 250-item menu from scratch, except for its iconic frozen cheesecakes from Los Angeles and North Carolina.

  • The Cheesecake Factory boasts one of the largest restaurant menus in the US, with over 250 items.
  • Business Insider went behind the scenes to see how chefs manage such a massive menu.
  • Most dishes at The Cheesecake Factory are freshly made, with cheesecakes being the main exception.

Almost every item on The Cheesecake Factory's 250-plus-item menu is made from scratch in-house.

But the restaurant chain's most iconic item, cheesecakes, arrives frozen from bakeries in Los Angeles and North Carolina.

They are then completed with fresh garnishes and sauces and topped with the restaurant's signature whipped cream, freshly prepared in-house.

Business Insider was offered a rare look behind the scenes at The Cheesecake Factory to learn how chefs juggle such a wide variety of orders.

The operation relies on tightly coordinated prep stations, digital timing systems, and cooks working against the clock.

To start, the sheer scale is enormous.

Cook with giant blender blend tomatoes for a sauce at The Cheesecake Factory.

A chef blends tomatoes for marinara sauce.

Before customers arrive, kitchen staff chop vegetables, slice meats and cheeses, roast tomatoes for marinara sauce, and prep ingredients for hundreds of dishes. At one prep station alone, employees make more than 100 sauces and dressings.

The Cheesecake Factory's kitchens also rely on organization to keep the sprawling menu running smoothly.

Behind the scenes look at a kitchen at The Cheesecake Factory.

Chefs have limited time to get dishes out once they're ordered.

Ingredients are stored by station to save time, and cooks follow digital screens that walk them through recipes step by step. Once an entrée is ordered, chefs generally have 15 minutes to get it out. Appetizers have a seven-minute target.

The chain's oversized menu traces back to its origins in the 1940s.

Old photo of David Overton, founder of The Cheesecake Factory.

David Overton founded The Cheesecake Factory.

Evelyn Overton sold cheesecakes in Detroit before moving the business to Los Angeles. Later, her son David Overton opened the first Cheesecake Factory restaurant in 1978.

The original restaurant offered about 60 menu items.

Old photo inside an early version of The Cheesecake Factory.

The original menu for The Cheesecake Factory was much smaller than today's.

Over time, that number ballooned to more than 250. The company now adds more than 10 new dishes annually, though executives have said the menu likely will not grow much larger because of operational complexity.

Developing new dishes can take up to 16 weeks.

Plate of a steak dish at The Cheesecake Factory.

The Asian Tenderloin Bowl is a new menu item at The Cheesecake Factory.

To launch 18 menu items, the company tasted more than 100 dishes, Jay Hinson estimated. Hinson is the senior vice president of restaurant kitchen operations at The Cheesecake Factory.

Despite the complexity, the strategy is working.

Animate chart showing The Cheesecake Factory's annual revenue from 2020 to 2025.

The Cheesecake Factory has made over $3 billion in annual revenue for the past four years.

Sales have increased annually since 2020. In the first quarter of 2026, average weekly sales reached an all-time high.

The cheesecakes remain one of the company's most profitable products.

A cheesecake from The Cheesecake Factory getting fresh whipped cream sprayed on top.

The cheesecakes may not be made in-house, but they're topped with fresh whipped cream that is.

Cake slices account for an estimated 17% of Cheesecake Factory sales in 2025.

Each of its desserts features a unique, made-to-order presentation with fresh garnishes, sauces, and whipped cream.

The centralized bakery model also solves a consistency problem.

Four plates with four different cheesecakes from The Cheesecake Factory.

The Cheesecake Factory has dozens of different cheesecake flavors.

While line cooks juggle as many as 10 pans at once and prepare hundreds of menu items daily, the frozen cheesecakes allow the company to standardize its signature dessert across more than 250 locations worldwide.

At a time when many diners are eating out less, The Cheesecake Factory has leaned harder into abundance.

Multiple dishes from The Cheesecake Factory showing off the restuarant's wide array of dishes.

No matter what you're craving, The Cheesecake Factory probably has a menu item that can satisfy.

Customers can order steak, orange chicken, pasta, burgers, or poke bowls from the same kitchen — and still end the meal with a slice of frozen cheesecake that helped build the brand in the first place.

The post Everything you eat at The Cheesecake Factory is made in-house, except for its most iconic dish appeared first on Business Insider