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cold, leftover mac & cheese is my kryptonite
the only cold left overs I love are fried chicken and pizza, and perhaps a slice of quiche. Pasta or rice leftovers just aren't as good as they were when served the first time.
The recipe I use has onion and it is GOOD. First you make a roux... OK - first you boil some pasta. Cook1 lb. of any small pasta shape you like to al dente in about a gallon of boiling salted water. Penne, mostaccioli, farfalla, and of course elbow macaroni all work just fine. Drain well and set aside. Then you make a roux...Melt 1 stick of butter in a large pot (I use a 7 qt dutch oven) over medium heat. Saute 1 medium onion, diced, in the butter until the onion is translucent. Add 1/2 cup all purpose flour to the butter and onion, and cook until the mixture is light brown and smells nutty (about 5 minutes). Now make a bearnaise...Slowly add 4 cups milk (or 1 bottle of beer and 3 cups of milk), stirring constantly with a whisk so there are no lumps. Season the sauce with salt, freshly ground black pepper and freshly grated nutmeg to taste. Stir in 3 drops of your favorite hot sauce. And add cheese...Stir in 1 lb each shredded cheddar and monterey jack cheeses until melted. Add the drained pasta to the pot and stir to coat. Top with another ½ lb of shredded cheddar cheese and a light layer of panko breadcrumbs (or plain breadcrumbs if you don't have panko). Then you bake...Bake at 450° until golden brown and bubbly. Let the casserole stand for a few minutes before cutting into it. It's hard to do because it smells really good, but the sauce is the culinary equivalent of napalm. Let it sit for about ten minutes and you'll be happier eating it. Serves up to 12 people as a side dish or 8 as a main course.
(bernaise is actually made in the fashion of hollondaise-- egg yolks & clarified butter. You're describing a bechamel which is jus roux & milk)
that's nearly 1/3 lb of cheese per person! (1/5 of a lb as a side)
You say that like it's a problem...
I don't even know if it's a problem or not, I'm still in shock.
Given that a serving of cheese is 1 oz, and I have definitely eaten 4 servings of cheese at a time before, I'm not fazed
you should move to Canada, our cheese serving size is 1.5 oz... I'm not a mac and cheese eater, but do occasionally eat too much pizza... I imagine it's quite likely there's just as much cheese there. But seeing it in writing makes it real, I guess.
Secretly, I would love to move to Canada. I feel Canadian.I don't like extra cheese on pizza for some reason, but I can demolish a baked brie or an assiete fromage like nobody's business.Back to mac & cheese... I know it's cliche, but I really like truffled mac & cheese.
I read an article yesterday about a hot-shot BBQ place in Brooklyn (the owner is from S Carolina if I recall)... any way, he does his mac and cheese in a waffle iron (I mean, I presume he stirs macaroni into cheese sauce then uses that as "batter").It's possible that would be mac and cheese I could get behind.