Tuesday, June 03, 2008

The Mac-n-cheese queen

That's me, I guess. We had mac-n-cheese for lunch today and our guests were stunned that I made my own instead of using a boxed mix. That has happened before. I just don't happen to keep box mixes around. I did once decide that I didn't like the fact that most boxed mixes have artificial food dye in them, but the joke was on me when I checked my "natural" cheddar cheese label. But anyway, it's easier for me to store pasta, cheese and milk separately.

My recipe is very simple; it comes from The Rainbow Bakery Cookbook: A Color-Full Adventure Children's Cookbook which my kids received as a gift a few years ago (Thanks Ls!). It's published by Gold Medal Flour.


Pot of Gold Cheese Sauce

2 tablespoons butter or margarine
2 tablespoons flour (you know in the book they specify the brand)
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup milk
1 cup shredded cheddar cheese

Melt the butter in a saucepan, add flour and salt and whisk till smooth and bubbly. Add the milk, stirring constantly (I never do), boil for 1 minute. Reduce the heat to very low and add the cheese; stir till it's melted.

If you have some powdered mustard, a dash of that brings out the cheese flavor. A dash of cayenne gives a little kick.

Then add the cooked pasta. This recipe is just for cheese sauce so it doesn't specify an amount, and I'm not sure - I think for that amount of sauce, maybe 1/2 a pound. But sometimes my kids say it's too cheesy. Sometimes we like having some left over to dunk bread in. Or pour it over tortilla chips. It's a good thing to experiment with. And it just doesn't take much longer than doing the boxed mix.

You can also put it in a baking dish, put some breadcrumbs on top, and bake it for a while. But I never bother with that, the kids are always in too big a hurry to eat it.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

That is the exact recipe I use, except I do it in the microwave. My kids WILL NOT eat Kraft Mac and cheese!

DADvocate said...

Pretty much how I make mac and cheese except I don't bake it, just eat it. Yum!

I prefer White Lily flour because it is very light and, until just recently, it was made in my hometown of Knoxville. :-)

Sheryl said...

Too cheesy?! No. Not even possible.

This sounds so good and easy - my kind of recipe! I'll have to try it soon.

Marbel said...

Sarah - Never thought of nuking it.

Dadvocate - Since I spent most of my life in the Northwest, I'm a Bob's Red Mill fan. King Arthur seems to be the flour of choice here. I didn't know you were from Knoxville.

Sheryl - Yes, too cheesy. You know my kids are weird.

DADvocate said...

I lived my first 38 years in Knoxville. I live in Ohio near Maysville, KY now. We have King Arthur flour around here but I've never heard of Bob's Red Mill.

Marbel said...

That is an area - Knoxville, all of TN really - that I have never gotten to visit. Maybe while we're living on the east coast.