When life (or Kerrygold) gives you lots of butter and cheese, the obvious choice is to make a soul-warming, cozy dish of homemade baked macaroni and cheese.
I am not lying when I say I have a lot of butter and cheese. After a long run in the most bitter of temperatures on Thursday, I came home to a big box that included this.
Yes, 20 bars of Kerrygold butter! And 10 blocks of various cheeses, Kerrygold shopping bags, and a gorgeous Newbridge silver cheese knife. How nice is that?!
I will be picking a winner for the Kerrygold giveaway tonight, so enter and spread the word if you haven’t already!
To make my mac and cheese, I consulted a few online recipes for technique and timing. I wanted to make sure I made the cheese sauce properly without making it clumpy.
I started with a few cups of whole wheat rotini.
While the pasta was boiling, I wrapped 6 garlic cloves in foil and popped it in the toaster oven at 400 for about 20 minutes, until I started smelling garlicky goodness.
Then I got to shredding the cheese. I used a mix of Dubliner and Aged Cheddar. Yum.
The base of my sauce was a quick roux, a mix of butter and flour cooked unti light brown in a pan. To that I added stuff I had left from baking adventures, 1/2 cup of light cream and about 1/2 cup heavy cream. After stirring the cream and roux and making sure it wasn’t lumpy, I added a scoop of Dijon mustard for some extra flavor.
I also grated in a bit of nutmeg, always a great addition to cream sauces. When the garlic was soft enough and cool to the touch, I squeezed it out of its skin and mashed it into the cream.
And at long last, I added in the grated cheese, stirring slowly on low heat to make sure it melted evenly and really blended into the sauce.
The cooked pasta got the royal treatment when I added it to the simmering, bubbling bath of cream and cheese. What could be better?
I poured the pasta into a buttered glass baking dish and topped all of this with Panko bread crumbs that had been mixed with a bit of melted butter in a frying pan on low heat.
Popping it into the oven for 20 minutes at 350 was all it needed for a golden breadcrumb crust. . .
And piping hot bubbly cheese. . .
The roasted garlic, mustard, and Panko really give this mac and cheese a bit of sophistication and make it an ideal dish for a potluck, family dinner, or even as a workday lunch. Add a green salad, and you have a pretty complete meal!
I am already thinking of the lobster meat I have in the freezer for next time. . .
What is your favorite kind of mac and cheese? Do you have a special cheese you like to use or any fun additions?
Tags: Aged Cheddar, Dubliner, Food, garlic, Kerrygold, macaroni and cheese, recipe, whole wheat pasta
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One night I made mac and cheese and had a bunch of random cheeses in the fridge leftover from a party. I made a plain cheddar one for Jeff and then cheddar, bacon, and tomato; bleu cheese, bacon, and tomato; and I think one with basil and parmesan. I always make the teeniest bit of cream sauce and add tons of cheese so the sauce gets really thick. And then our favorite thing to do is to fry the leftover mac and cheese up with butter!
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MMmmmMMmm that sounds AMAZING! I made some lobster mac&cheese last weekend w/ some super salty aged cheddar from Gypsy Kitchen down my street in Quincy and panko and radiatore (cool texture). Also added some shiitake and porcini mushrooms–but that was only b/c they were out of truffle oil 🙁 …sorry no pics
One of my cheapo mac&cheese faves is to add some manwich&turkey. Oh heck yes.
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Now that is how you refuel after a long run. You should give lessons in refueling.
I love bacon in my mac & cheese!-
I feel like such a cheater–every time you ask for a favorite, I always answer, “well-I-don’t-have-a-favorite-but…” (I don’t do decisions well at all). So I really love my Mom’s mac & cheese, but then Stouffer’s is good too when my husband’s out of town (I love how soft the macaroni are!), and yet every time I pass Kraft Cheese & Macaroni at the grocery store, I feel a pang of nostalgia for my childhood!
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That mac ‘n cheese looks diiiivine. Franklin Cafe Southie had a fabulous mac on their menu last winter. I basically ate there every night because of it. I am secretly campaigning for them to bring it back, but in the meantime, I’ve come up with my own modified version: mezze rigatoni, a tiny bit of olive oil, thyme, riccota salt and pepper and bread crumbs and percorino on top. It’s really, really good. 🙂
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