Preheat your oven to 220°C
In a large bowl, beat the cheese with the sugar until it is a smooth creamy consistency, add the flour and mix it through
Then, adding one egg at a time, blend each into the mix before adding the next, take care to not over whisk here because too much air will result in the end product having more of a <em>soufflé</em> sort of texture
When all 6 are added, mix in the cream and have a quick blast with an electric mixer or a few seconds of vigorous action with a whisk
Melt a little butter and coat the bottom and sides of a 23cm (9 inch) spring form cake tin
Line the tin with 2 sheets of baking paper, one left to right and one front to back. Coat the bottom and sides of each sheet after adding it. The goal here is to have enough paper popping up out of the top of the tin to keep the cake mix encased as it rises in the oven. It's a little fiddly at first, but try to be as neat as possible, folding in any bits of the side that are creating large gaps, and trimming the top when done to around 6cm (3 inches) about the rim.
Pour the mix into the tin, it will likely be perilously close to overflow, but you did such a good job lining that tin then that's fine :-)
Now bake it - the duration may take one or two attempts to get right. I find 50 minutes will result in a lovely cheesecake that is just set all the way through.
Take it out of the oven - it should have a very jelly like wobble to it - and leave it to cool and collapse onto itself for at least an hour, preferably 2 or 3