Submitted by HighbrowUsername t3_z67qbo in food
do0tz t1_iy0995q wrote
This looks so fucking good. Idk what I do wrong. I can never get a thick sauce. Maybe I use too much pasta? I have tried heavy cream, flour, etc. Always turns out bad. I guess I just suck at making Mac n cheese ðŸ˜
shrtnylove t1_iy0mrzy wrote
My go to each thanksgiving is a copy cat of sweetie pies mac n cheese. I usually have 10-15 ppl and I halve this recipe. Get rave reviews every year! https://www.food.com/amp/recipe/sweetie-pies-mac-and-cheese-449378
Notideal12 t1_iy13bi3 wrote
> sodium citrate
This is the key
H4mwallet t1_iy0altg wrote
More cheese!
crazeman t1_iy1era5 wrote
Try out Kenji's 3 ingredient Mac and Cheese recipe.
All you need is Cheese, mac and evaporated milk. Kenji uses evaporated milk as the emulsifier. There's probably better recipes out there but this one is hard to fuck up lol.
InnovativeFarmer t1_iy0sgc6 wrote
I use heavy cream and cheese. My mom uses cheese and a bechamel like sauce made of milk and roux. Its not quite a bechamel sauce though.
scalectrix t1_iy18apf wrote
When your smooth bechamel
contains cheeses as well
that's a mornay.
InnovativeFarmer t1_iy1b68v wrote
The sauce she uses is like a bechamel but not quite a bechamel.
Thats why a typed "a bechamel like sauce" and "its not quite a bechamel" that she uses to make her cheese sauce. Its not a mornay. That because is not even a bechamel she uses to make her cheese sauce. Its closer to the gravy she uses for cream chipped beef. Sometimes she just uses corn starch to thicken and there were a few times just used a thickening agent she got from an eldery friend of hers. Its what she has on hand.
FutureFruit t1_iy2hels wrote
They were doing the "that's amore" song melody to those words.
kozmic_blues t1_iy2spkt wrote
Would this be considered a r/whoosh? This person was singing you a clever song
scalectrix t1_iy30llq wrote
I think it would, though an understandable one. Just having a bit of fun!
I'm a bit of a fan of a cheese sauce (mornay or not) in all its glorious forms, and am disturbed by talk of additives such as sodium citrate, as well as the fact that the OP image shows no sign of having been finished and lightly (or darkly!) browned in the oven, as is required of a macaroni cheese (UK terminology - ditto cauliflower cheese) IMO, and I'm not at all sure about the addition of chives in this particular context. That said, it does look great! But if you want a more 'viscous' sauce, just add some mozzarella - it's what our lord Cheesus would want.
Personally I switch from milk to Italian white wine (Orvieto to be precise) half way through making my bechamel, to make it less claggy and more 'zingy', then use copious cheeses (cheddar obvs, being a Somerset resident, as well as gouda, emmental, gorgonzola, Port Salut, even sometimes some goats cheese or Roquefort! - whatever's available from the usually large fridge selection basically) and a splash of kirsch, as a nod to Swiss fondue. No herbs or seasoning for me though (apart from sometimes a little white pepper - secret ingredient). Let the cheese be the star!
InnovativeFarmer t1_iy4y42h wrote
I know its a song. But I was sharing my recipe for making cheese sauce for mac and cheese creamier and thicker and people disagreed with it. I gave two examples.
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