Thursday, January 13, 2011

Macaroni and Cheese

Baked Macaroni and Cheese

Who doesn’t love macaroni and cheese?  No one, that’s who!  We sure do, so of course it was quite distressing pondering the thought of giving it up for good.  I don’t really remember where this recipe came from but it makes a shockingly good vegan version, and as you’ll see its really easy. 

The cheesy-ness comes from nutritional yeast.  It has a funky, parmesan-y kinda flavor that I really don’t like plainly sprinkled on things like popcorn.  When used judiciously though, as in this recipe, it really works.  This is the basic version but of course we like to jazz it up once in a while too, adding things like peas or mushrooms (or really anything in the fridge that needs to get used up).  We always plan on having leftovers of this for days but it rarely lasts the night!

Here are the ingredients:

½ c. Earth Balance
½ c. flour
Water/veg stock
S+p, nutmeg
½ c. nutritional yeast

1lb. macaroni noodles, whole wheat if you like

Olive oil
Garlic
Chili flakes
Panko bread crumbs

Begin by making the sauce.  Combine the Earth Balance and flour over medium heat until well combined, no lumps, and the rawness cooked out of the flour.
Whisk in the stock (you could simply use water too) and cook until it has the consistency of gravy. 

Bread crum topping:
Start a little less than ¼ c. olive oil and garlic in a small sauté pan, bringing up to heat together.  Add a pinch of chili flakes about 30seconds before garlic is done.  Add panko and stir to saturate with the garlic-chili oil.  Keep toasting on medium, stirring quite often until the panko is evenly (lightly) toasted.

















Boil macaroni and until not quite tender.
Add seasonings, then nutritional yeast and simmer on medium low.  Add extra liquid to achieve the consistency you want, or to simply stretch the sauce a little bit for a saucier end result.

Combine cooked noodles and sauce in a bowl, then pour into 8x8” baking dish


Top the macaroni with breadcrumbs, bake for about 20minutes at 350F. Everything is already cooked and warm so the trick to achieving a creamy (not dry) result is, duh, to not bake it too long.


Here's the end result.  It serves up into beautifully uniform squares that hold their shape if you wait a few minutes before serving (or as leftovers out of the fridge).  We didn't wait this time.


Meghan likes hers with ketchup.
This is a staple item in our house and when we go on a bender we might eat this a few times in a month.

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