Monday, August 29, 2011

Mac & Cheese

Elbow Mac & Cheese

This is for tonight. It's a too-much-work recipe that is also one of my defaults (i.e. something I eat more often than is heart-wise). I start with a variation on a Cooking Light recipe that came from my sister, where the cream sauce base is made on the stove top. I like to finish it in the oven for the crispy top, so I have mutated the recipe to be more like the all-oven ones, sans egg. Also, I usually use twice the cheese asked for in most recipes, closer to a full pound. Cheeeeeeeese...





I tends to look a lot like the photo above. Today I will be using a chedder-gruyere hybrid from Trader Joe's that is a pretty good sandwich cheese, but not one I want for cheese-and-crackers snacking. The texture is crumbly like the manchego or the goat milk cheddar to which I've recently taken a shine. I have whole milk in my refrigerator from making a shrimp & peas cream sauce the other night.

2 Tbl butter
4 Tbl flour
1/2 tsp dry mustard
pinch salt (omitted because I have salted butter)
pepper (white pepper would be ideal, black pepper is more robust)
2 C whole milk

In a small saucepan, melt butter over low heat. Add flour, mustard, and pepper until blended. (Make a roux.) Pour in milk, stirring constantly. Increase heat to high; bring to a boil 1 minute, stirring constantly. Remove from heat.

8 ounces of cooked pasta (macaroni, shells, or penne)
up to 16 ounces of shredded cheeses (a little smoked cheese in the mix is very tasty, but don't make it with only that)
smoked paprika

Layer the pasta, cheese, and cream sauce in a casserole dish, as if making lasagna. Finish with sauce covering all the pasta and cheese as the top layer. Garnish with a sprinkle of paprika, if desired. Bake in a 450 oven for 15 minutes or until bubbling on top with a nicely browned layer. This works best with cheddar or mozzarella in the mix.

This is ready to eat hot. I have doubled the sauce from the original recipes because the sauce is my favorite part. This is a dish with a queso fundido quality, great if you are a bread lover. As leftovers, there is more sauce than the pasta can suck up, so it reheats pretty well. Tell yourself this when you are reaching for your 3rd serving.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Mayonnaise Chocolate Cookies

I don't think I've made the Tollhouse recipe for chocolate chip cookies as written in decades. Really. It's a good jumping off point, and can be found on the back of any Nestle morsels package:

2 1/4 Cup flour
1 C (2 Sticks) of butter
3/4 C brown sugar
3/4 C white sugar
2 eggs
1 tsp salt
1 tsp baking soda
1 C chocolate morsels
1 C chopped nuts

Which is too much sugar and too much salt, even when using unsalted butter. Bleh. It's a recipe to cover up the inferior quality of Nestle chocolate chips. Like all too-many-tools recipes, it asks you to cream the butter with a mixer, yada yada. Too many bowls.

In its most primitive state, this is a One Bowl recipe that can be made with a spoon or hard spatula, half the sugar, and allowed to wild forage for other goodies in your pantry.

Today I almost stuck to the recipe. I was intending to make it to spec. Nevertheless, as I was setting out the ingredients, I noticed the cocoa powder. As I was getting out the beater I found myself thinking about how the mayonnaise in mayo chocolate cake is, because of the vinegar, supposed to bring out the chocolate. (I was recently reading mayo cake recipes because I have a store brand -- Kroger -- mayonnaise that is just awful. It is not, as intended, putting me off mayo so much as making me want the good stuff.)

You might guess what happened next. No? I substituted half the butter, one stick, for 1/2 C of mayo. I reduced the eggs to 1. I added 1/2 C of cocoa. I reduced the sugar to 1/2 C white + 3/4 C brown sugar. I reduced the salt to 1/2 tsp, but I should have left it out altogether because my butter and mayo both had salt. I forgot about the salt in the mayonnaise.



The chocolate, chocolate chip, pecan and white chip cookies came out well. They were slightly drier than ideal; that can be fixed by reducing the flour by that 1/4 C, making the dry 2 C flour + 1/2 cocoa. The dough was very nice, fluffy, not too sticky but with good cohesiveness. The slightly over-salted flavor of the raw dough baked out so it was fine in cookie form. Warm from the oven, they had a brownie-like flavor but were cookie-firm. Cooled, they are an almost perfect cookie. The dryness promotes enjoyment with a glass of milk.

Mayonnaise for the win -- who knew?