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No Internally-Crispy Mac and Cheese

by jefftk
20th Dec 2024
jefftk
1 min read
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12

Practical
Personal Blog

12

No Internally-Crispy Mac and Cheese
4AnthonyC
2AnthonyC
3Trevor Hill-Hand
2jefftk
2Viliam
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[-]AnthonyC8mo40

Personally I'm not a fan of the pasta texture of baked mac and cheese, but I've definitely sauced the cooked pasta, topped with cheese, and broiled it. That's fast, and you could spread it across multiple pans so it has more surface area. I suspect a blow torch could also work?

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[-]AnthonyC8mo20

Edit to add: I'm also very much a fan of panko toasted in butter in a pan as a topping. Can be made in advance and left in a bowl next to the mac and cheese for everyone to use however much they want.

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[-]Trevor Hill-Hand8mo30

I wonder what effect an all-edges pan would have; how did it taste near the edges?

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[-]jefftk8mo20

It's not really an edge thing, it's a top vs inside thing. So I wouldn't expect more side surface area to help?

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[-]Viliam8mo20

Could you maybe somehow flip everything upside down in the middle of baking? So you get two tops.

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Whenever I make baked mac and cheese the crispy top layer is the most popular part. The Maillard-browned cheese is really very good. Sometimes I'll make extra topping by grating another round of cheddar onto the top and sticking it back under the broiler, which works pretty well.

A few weeks ago I got excited about the possibility of making something with more layers: could I put down sauced pasta, then cheese, brown it, and repeat? Something a bit like lasagna?

In the spirit of reporting negative results, this turns out not to work well. The flavor is there, but the texture I was imagining, with alternating layers of chewy pasta and crispy browned cheese, is not. In retrospect this makes sense: if you put something crispy like that between two layers of sauced pasta, it's going to take in a lot of moisture from the sauce.

Still worth eating, but mildly less tasty than the normal way while also being much slower.