You know what's great?
Mac and cheese. You know what's better?
Homemade mac and cheese.
You know what's the worst? When you spend time, money, mental and
emotional effort on cooking something that you don't like in the end.
Macaroni and cheese can be especially frustrating to mess up because
we're usually making it in large batches, with lots of cheese, and that
is not a melted cheese opportunity you want to squander. Let's get
through this together, and discuss some of the mac and cheese mistakes
you might be making.
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Not Making Your Own Because It Seems Hard/Time-Consuming
mtlabor/Food52
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Not Using Enough Cheese
Flickr: ilovememphis
As the name indicates, there are two ingredients
that are important in this dish: the macaroni and the cheese. Mac and
cheese should either be creamy or stringy because of the cheese. Cheese
should coat the noodles. This is a cheese-heavy dish. Don't eat it every
day, but when you do eat it, eat it right.
Our rule of thumb is to always grate more cheese than we think we'll
need. Even if you've shredded too much, you can save it for another use.
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Using Any Pasta But Elbows Or Shells
Flickr: megan.chromik
The amazing thing about pasta is that certain
shapes are designed for certain applications. Macaroni elbows and shells
are designed to hold thick, creamy sauces. Cheese sauce is too heavy
for a lot of pastas, making them either limp and flabby or clumped and
unmanageable. Stick to the classics on this one.
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Overcooking Your Pasta
Flickr: EvelynGiggles
Whether you are a stovetop mac and cheese maker
or an oven-baked mac and cheese maker, there is one universal truth in
mac and cheesery: you're going to have to cook those noodles twice. When
you do the initial boil on your pasta, cook it to just under al dente,
so that there's a still plenty of chew on the noodles. Then you won't
eat flabby macaroni covered in delicious cheese.
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Adding Too Much Liquid
Flickr: Rex Roof
You want your mac and cheese to be creamy, but
you do not want to make mac and cheese soup (well maybe you do, but we
don't). Add your liquids a bit at a time, stir to incorporate, then see
where you stand. You can always add more, taking away is significantly
more complex.
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Not Browning The Top A Little
Flickr: technochick
Look at this. This is like the surface of a
beautiful cheese planet. When you make your own mac and cheese, whether
you are a proponent of topping with breadcrumbs or not, you get the
opportunity to turn your oven on to broil, then watch very closely as
the top bubbles and browns. Don't squander this cheese opportunity.
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Trying To Replicate The Boxed Stuff
Imgur
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Using Velveeta
Flickr: Charles Williams
No, guys. This is not cheese. There is one appropriate culinary use for Velveeta
occasionally and that is
queso. Keep it away from your noodles.
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Using Really Fancy Cheese
Flickr: daskerst
Guys, this isn't worth it. Do not melt a $14 hunk
of Ossau Iraty into your mac and cheese. If the mac and cheese you love
contains fontina, asiago, parmesan and provolone -- fine, whatever, it
will never beat cheddar and monterey jack. You want a mild cheese for
creaminess, a sharp cheese for tang. Keep it simple, keep it relatively
inexpensive, save the fancy stuff for the cheese plate.
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Getting Avocado Into The Mix
Imgur
We love avocado. We love mac and cheese. There are some ingredients that just do not need to mix. Let's
stop this insanity.
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Using Truffle Oil
Flickr: C John Thompson
Okay, guys. Real talk: truffle oil is the worst.
We know it's expensive. We know it's luxurious. We know it's derived
from a specialty ingredient the world goes absolutely bonkers for. But
it sucks. Especially in mac and cheese, where it makes the whole dish
taste like a food scientist's idea of what artificial truffle extract
should taste like. Stop using it. At least in our mac and cheese.
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Limiting Yourself To A Bowl
Imgur
A bowl of mac and cheese is comforting and perfect, but there are
grilled cheeses, pizzas, potatoes, hot dogs and more to be topped. Your imagination will serve you well in this case.
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Created in collaboration with Kitchen Daily and Patch,
Mix It Up aims to make the lives of mothers easier by offering simple
and creative solutions to everyday challenges. Mix It Up is presented by
General Mills.
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