Once you master this basic recipe, you can alter it to your pleasing.
From the first time I made macaroni and cheese, I?ve used this basic recipe, with the sauce you simply stir up.? We were not a big macaroni and cheese family, and never had any version from the box until college, when the hot pot was our main cooking apparatus and I had an ingenious roommate.?
Skip to next paragraph Perre Coleman MagnessThe Runaway Spoon
Perre Magness has studied food and cooking around the world, mostly by eating, but also through serious study. Coursework at Le Cordon Bleu London and intensive courses in Morocco, Thailand and France has broadened her own culinary skill and palate. The kitchen of choice is at home, cooking like most people, experimenting with unique but practical ideas.
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I think I might have originally found the recipe in a kids? cookbook, but I don?t really remember. The recipe served me well for years, particularly in a poorly equipped kitchen in graduate school. And I just thought this was how mac and cheese was made. It was years before I learned that most macaroni and cheese recipes start with a roux made into a cream sauce.
As I progressed in the kitchen, I started working on recipes made with b?chamel sauce, white wine based sauces, an onion soubise, exotic cheeses and the like. But for simple meals, I always came back to this method. And I?ve really decided I like it better. It?s very creamy, very cheesy, and of course could not be simpler. So now I make it with cheese only, or flavorful add-ins.
This version is my favorite, and based on a macaroni and cheese served at a favorite restaurant.? I am sure they use a great more expertise and skill in making it, but I manage to get the flavors I love spot-on.?I like corkscrew-y cavatappi pasta, but regular macaroni, or?shells, or?farfalle work equally well.??Once you have this simple, basic recipe down, you can alter it however you please ? with different cheeses, added spices, bacon or roasted chicken ? the possibilities are endless.
Creamy Macaroni and Cheese with Country Ham and Leeks
Serves 6, 8 as a side dish?
4 leeks
6 tablespoons butter, divided
1/4 cup white wine [editor's note: substitute cooking wine or chicken broth of the same amount]
8 ounces uncookedelbow macaroni or cavatappi noodles
8 ounces sharp cheddar cheese
8 ounces white cheddar cheese
4 ounces fontina cheese
2 cups whole milk
1/4 cup flour
1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
Salt and ground black pepper to taste
8 ounces country ham, finely diced
Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F. Butter a 2 quart baking dish well.
Slice the white and palest green parts of the leek in half lengthwise, then slice into half-moons. Rinse the leeks very well in a colander under cool running water and shake to drain. Melt 4 tablespoons butter in a medium sauce pan over medium-high heat and add the leeks, with a little water clinging to them, and stir to coat. Pour in the white wine and 1/4 cup water, cover the pan and cook, stirring occasionally until the leeks are wilted, transparent and soft, about 20 minutes. If needed, add a bit more water to prevent sticking.
Meanwhile, cook the macaroni according to package instructions in well-salted water.? Drain and return to the pan off the heat. ?Stir 2 tablespoons butter into the pasta to melt and coat to prevent sticking. Leave to cool.
Grate all the cheeses and toss together. In a bowl, whisk together the milk, flour, garlic powder, salt and black pepper. Shake well for at least a minute until the flour is completely mixed with the milk.
Toss together the cooled pasta and the most of the grated cheeses, reserving a few handfuls for the top of the dish. Stir in the leeks and diced country ham until evenly distributed. Pour over the milk mixture and stir thoroughly until well mixed. Spoon into the buttered dish and spread out to create an even surface. Sprinkle over the remaining cheese.
Bake for about 30 minutes, until golden on top and bubbling and heated through.
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