Sunday 16 June 2013

Thinking outside the box (of KD)

Let's face it: I haven't posted in awhile.

As I alluded to the last time I posted, I've been going out for dinner a lot over the last couple of weeks.  But the other night while staying with my parents I finally found a chance to cook.  The weather was cold and stormy, which called for something warm and bubbly: macaroni and cheese.

Like any good college student, I fell in love with macaroni and cheese in the form of Kraft Dinner, the radioactive orange meal in a box that contains more preservatives than dairy products.  As I grew older, however, I started to desire something that tasted less like sodium and orange number six.

The potential problem with homemade mac and cheese is one of money: good cheese is expensive, and good cheese is what adds flavour.  So I had to find another way to make this casserole taste delicious.....

I found the answer in a recipe by the fantastic Michael Smith.  You can use whatever pasta you have in the cupboard and, better yet, whatever cheese happens to be in your fridge (or on sale).  The flavour comes from the spices added to the sauce: garlic, paprika, cayenne, and dijon mustard (Michael Smith's secret weapon).

Ingredients
-1 pound of pasta (any kind)
-1/4 cup butter
-several cloves of garlic
-2/3 cup flour
-a big splash of white wine
-5 cups milk
-1 pound cheese (any kind)
-2 tablespoons dijon mustard
-2 tablespoons paprika
-cayenne pepper to taste

Directions

Optional step 0......for more flavour, use bacon.  Chop approximately one pound of bacon and toss into a thick bottomed saucepan over medium-high heat (if you add one cup of water, you can allow the bacon to gradually release it's fat and brown evenly without burning).  Cook until the bacon is nicely cooked; remove the bacon, but reserve the fat.

(If you go with the bacon step, omit the butter and use bacon fat instead.)

1) Cook the pasta according to package directions.  Drain (don't rinse...the start helps the sauce stick to the pasta) and set aside.

2) Melt the butter over medium heat.  Add the garlic and cook for several minutes.  Add the flour and stir with a wooden spoon until a smooth paste forms.  Continue cooking the roux for several minutes to add flavour.

3) Add the wine, and stir until the mixture becomes smooth again.  Slowly add the milk and switch to a whisk, stirring until the mixture is smooth.  Then cook a couple of minutes longer until the milk begins to thicken.

4) Stir in the cheese, dijon mustard, paprika, and cayenne pepper.  Stir the cooked pasta into the cheese mixture.  Pour everything into a 9x13 pan and bake at 350 degrees F for about 30 minutes (or until the cheese is bubbly).

For added flavour I like to sprinkle extra parmesan cheese across the top of my mac and cheese....
Then, as always.....enjoy!!


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