(This will be a series, from our local newspaper.)
Look up “comfort food” in the dictionary, and you’ll no doubt find “macaroni and cheese” under the definition.
There’s an undeniable allure to a big casserole dish filled to the top with fat elbow noodles and bubbling, slightly crisp-on-the-top yellow cheese.
Eat it with a big salad. Or with a side of ham. Or all by its lonesome.
No matter how it’s eaten, no matter your age, a dish of macaroni and cheese, most would agree, is what many of us turn to for solace and just plain good eatin’.
Why, it’s no wonder that Thomas Jefferson served the dish at a White House dinner in 1802 (some even credit him with coming up with the dish, but there are conflicting reports on that).
And it’s not at all surprising that so many people swear to have in their possession the best recipe. The absolute best.
Which is why it seemed perfectly reasonable when more than 50 readers rushed us their recipes, many passed down from generations, all family favorites they swear by. We’ve printed as many as possible, but we couldn’t print them all — some recipes came in past our deadline, some with incomplete ingredients, and some we just didn’t have the room for.
We tried a few and were impressed.
Mary See’s egg, ricotta and no-milk recipe was a custard-ish concoction with a fat layer of mozzarella cheese blanketing the top.
Diana Videtti uses 2 cups half-and-half in her recipe. It tastes so creamy you think you are drinking it right out of the carton.
And Merritt McGlothlin throws 8 tablespoons butter, 4 cups Cheddar cheese and 1/2 cup heavy cream into his recipe. Can you say rich?
“The first time I ever made it was when my wife was sick,” said McGlothlin, 63. “It just seemed to be what the doctor ordered.”
Look up “comfort food” in the dictionary, and you’ll no doubt find “macaroni and cheese” under the definition.
There’s an undeniable allure to a big casserole dish filled to the top with fat elbow noodles and bubbling, slightly crisp-on-the-top yellow cheese.
Eat it with a big salad. Or with a side of ham. Or all by its lonesome.
No matter how it’s eaten, no matter your age, a dish of macaroni and cheese, most would agree, is what many of us turn to for solace and just plain good eatin’.
Why, it’s no wonder that Thomas Jefferson served the dish at a White House dinner in 1802 (some even credit him with coming up with the dish, but there are conflicting reports on that).
And it’s not at all surprising that so many people swear to have in their possession the best recipe. The absolute best.
Which is why it seemed perfectly reasonable when more than 50 readers rushed us their recipes, many passed down from generations, all family favorites they swear by. We’ve printed as many as possible, but we couldn’t print them all — some recipes came in past our deadline, some with incomplete ingredients, and some we just didn’t have the room for.
We tried a few and were impressed.
Mary See’s egg, ricotta and no-milk recipe was a custard-ish concoction with a fat layer of mozzarella cheese blanketing the top.
Diana Videtti uses 2 cups half-and-half in her recipe. It tastes so creamy you think you are drinking it right out of the carton.
And Merritt McGlothlin throws 8 tablespoons butter, 4 cups Cheddar cheese and 1/2 cup heavy cream into his recipe. Can you say rich?
“The first time I ever made it was when my wife was sick,” said McGlothlin, 63. “It just seemed to be what the doctor ordered.”
Comment