Anything, anything to stay away from the Kraft Cheesy Mac!
As Adam, the source, notes, “The idea here is that rather than making a fussy white sauce, something I never seemed to get the hang of, you make a custard for the cheese. It’s fantastic and easy — not much harder than the box, and so much better.”
Ingredients:
½ lb. Macaroni
4 tbsp Butter
2 lg Eggs
12 oz. Evaporated Milk
¼ tsp Hot Pepper Sauce
1 tsp Mustard
3 cups Grated Cheese
Pepper
Salt
Instructions:
- Boil up the Maraconi in salted water, definitely al dente.
- Drain Macaroni, transfer to a large fryer, dutch oven, or large pan (if the original isn’t large enough). Should be something with a thick bottom such that heat is distributed evenly.
- Add Butter; leave it to melt in the hot macaroni.
- Mix Eggs, 1 cup (8 oz) Evaporated Milk, Pepper Sauce, Mustard, Salt & Pepper (to taste) in a small boul.
- Put Macaroni (and Butter) on medium heat.
- Pour the Egg mix over the Macaroni along with 2 cups of the Cheese. Stir constantly until the cheese starts to melt.
- Gradually add in the rest of the Cheese and Evaporated Milk, stirring constantly, for about 5 minutes more. The whole mix will look overly liquid to begin with, but as the cheese melts and the egg cooks, it will thicken.
Serves: 4
Prep Time: 20 minutes
Ingredient notes:
- The original recipe calls for half Cheddar, half Monterey Jack. Since we always have some Mexican Blend shredded in bags in the house, we use that.
- You could go for more Macaroni; as is, the recipe has a high sauce-to-mac ratio.
- The original recipe calls fo 2 tsp Mustard. Consensus in our household is that’s too much.
Serving notes:
- If you want to be fancy, you can take the individual servings, put them in a small ceramic dish, sprinkle bread crumbs or crumpled croutons, and put them under the broiler for a short bit.
- The original writer suggests the recipe is not as good the second day, but it can be reheated on the range, slowly, with a little extra milk.
Source: Adam Blust at “Words Mean Things,” who originally got it from Pam Anderson’s The Perfect Recipe.