First of all- glucose is a different sugar than table sugar. Corn syrup in the US is similar but has a few extra compounds. As far as I can tell it is used for similar reasons as liquid glucose in the EU.
http://www.ochef.com/784.htm
It is used for a couple reasons:
- it is thicker than sugar syrups.
- when making candy a little corn syrup can be added to the sugar solution to prevent crystallization.
- in the US at least, it is much cheaper than cane sugar.
You can buy it in stores here- I can't say whether you can in Belgium.
I have, on occasion, been forced to use a very thick sugar syrup in place of corn syrup. The recipe used the syrup for reason #1 above and turned out well. If it had been in there for reason #2 it would have been less successful.
In general, if you can find it, it is probably better to buy than to make a substitute because of reason #3.
Can you make cheesecake with honey instead of sugar? Sure!
Is it as simple as just replacing it 1:1? Not quite, there's increased moisture, but check the top answer here.
You'll need to reduce any liquid you might be adding a bit. Without seeing your exact recipe, I can't give you an exact answer there.
Whoa. Whoa. Whoa....thats not cheesecake, thats no-bake 'cheesecake'. And that's not normal sugar, that's icing sugar.
No bake 'cheesecake' is much more forgiving about the ingredients - you'd not trying to set a custard like, you just want a thick, flavored, semi-firm pie filling. Add the honey, but leave off a touch of the creme, maybe 20-30 g overall? Icing sugar will actually thicken it a bit as its not only not a liquid, but its also got cornstarch in it. There's about 1/4 tsp of cornstarch in that much icing sugar, so I'd add that. If you're against cornstarch, I don't think it'd be the end of the world to leave it off.
I'd add the honey and then add 350 g of creme and see how the consistency is. You'll probably end up adding another 20g or so, but I'd wait and see.
Best Answer
Confectioner's sugar and powdered sugar are two names for the same thing, at least in US usage. In the UK, this product would be called icing sugar.
So it is not even a substitution, it is the requested ingredient, and of course you can use it by either name.