Kathryn Merteuil
Barden Bella
- Joined
- May 11, 2012
- Messages
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Much to my surprise, there was NO macaroni and cheese this year!
First time for everything!
First time for everything!
First time for everything!Never personally did it or ran into it as a holiday thing. I think it's certainly less casual than green bean casserole made with tinned beans, so fancy isn't why I don't think, just general tradition.
Seconding that it's also super expensive and it's time consuming - but good.
Someone asked what cheeses - I like to mix, (in general, it's pretty forgiving whatever you like ime) well-aged cheddar (like 4 years), medium-aged cheddar (like 2), edam, some smoked gruyere, parm.
I would never have Mac and Cheese on a table at the holiday-its more of a kids birthday party type dish than a grown up holiday dish. I can't say I have ever been to anyones house where they served it with a meal either. I do make it homemade but just for me and my daughter on nights where I want to have just one thing, not as a holiday meal.
Which cheeses do you like to use?
RECIPES please!!!
( I too prefer not to use velveeta!)
Mac and Cheese is NOT on our regular diet, for DH and I.
But a good hot delicious homemade mac-and-cheese sounds so good.
I need to make it more often for DS!
I occasionally whip up a mac-and-cheese in a pot.
(macaroni, butter, oil, deluxe real american, a little shredded mild cheddar, salt, pepper)
But I would love some good recipes for a better/fancier mac-and-cheese.
Not fancy enough? So turkey is considered fancy? Ham fancy? Those are easier to make then mac and cheese. Stuffing fancy? My daughter is a vegetarian and loves my homemade mac and cheese so its on our table for the holidays and everyone raves about it. Unless you are having some elite, hard to cook, over the top meal, then I think its fine.
First, cook 1 1/2 cups macaroni.
Then make a roux (what some others are calling a white sauce). To make a roux, melt 3 tablespoons of butter in a saucepan, mix in 2 tablespoons flour.
Add 2 cups whole milk. For richer Macaroni and Cheese, use 1 cup whole milk and 1 cup half and half. Stick until thick and boiling. Mix in 16 ounces shredded Extra Sharp Cheddar Cheese, Stir it until it is all melted.
Mix in the cooked macaroni, put in a casserole dish. Bake for about 40 minutes at 350.
Apparently one of Bellagio's fine dining restaurants is known for it's Macaroni and Cheese......but at $45, I suspect it is a cut above what most of us make.

We are African American and we serve macaroni and cheese at holiday dinners. We don't do the boxed stuff only baked. We were also given plates by our neighbors and it was on all of them too. Also, for a normal dinner, Mac n Cheese is ALWAYS a side and never an entree in most AA households.
I just got off the phone with a friend who travels frequently to Las Vegas on business, and she just laughed at the comments about Macaroni and Cheese not being fancy enough for a holiday meal. Apparently one of Bellagio's fine dining restaurants is known for it's Macaroni and Cheese......but at $45, I suspect it is a cut above what most of us make.
Whoa, a roux is not a white sauce, or a sauce of any kind. A roux is equal parts butter (or oil) and flour, cooked to whatever level the recipe or taste calls for, to thicken a sauce or dish.
The white sauce is a bechamel, it's one of the mother sauces (and it needs seasoning!).
I don't just use one cheese, and wouldn't use only very old cheddar if I did, it doesn't have a particularly smooth melt and gives up a lot of oil. I prefer a blend of cheeses, but that's obviously just personal preference.
You haven't eaten at my house.![]()
Oh well.Okay, never heard of a bechamel, however I googled it, and it said it's a rouxOh well.
That's pretty much my experience too. Mac & cheese was something for the picky kids, but nobody served it as part of a holiday meal.
When I was a kid and Catholics were still forbidden to eat meat on Fridays, a fairly common meal was some type of fried fish with mac & cheese and stewed tomatoes as side dishes.
My wife had a bad experience with mac & cheese. Apparently the lunch lady once forced her eat the school's gross M&C and to this day gets the willies just THINKING about it.
Jim
Okay, never heard of a bechamel, however I googled it, and it said it's a rouxOh well.
If you are patient enough, mixing in the cheese slowly, you can get a pretty smooth melt. But you're right, it is personal preference. Like when my kids were in daycare, and the cook made macaroni and cheese from scratch, and the 3-8 year old set hated it. They grew up with Kraft Macaroni and Cheese, and like the taste better. Just like I read somewhere that kids today as so used to margarine, they think butter tastes funny.
Béchamel sauce also known as white sauce, is made with a roux of butter and flour cooked in milk. It is one of the mother sauces of French cuisine...
