I lived a decade in Atlanta and one of my favorite restaurants is Food 101. Their philosophy was to take comfort food (meatloaf, onion rings, tomato soup), and do a gourmet riff on American classics. I lived a block away from the place and I was there once a week.

In that vein, I’ve been thinking of mac-n-cheese lately. If you’re a purist, or have your favorite, you probably don’t want to read further, because I’m going to take it apart and put it back together again. Not because I think my take is the best version there ever was or will be, but because I just wanted to play with a classic.

So: New Mexico Chile, Three Cheese Mac-n-Cheese, with criminis, and (of course) bacon.


Classic mac-n-cheese — not out of a blue box mac-n-cheese, but Continental mac-n-cheese — uses a Mornay sauce. Mornay is basically a béchamel with cheese, and a sauce aurore is a béchamel with a bit of tomato paste to give it a nice sunset color. One of my favorite derivative sauces is a supreme, which is a combination of velouté (stock and roux) and béchamel (milk/cream and roux). Many times, I’ve played up a supreme with some New Mexico red chile for color and kick, and have created my own take on a spicy sauce supreme aurore (hey, chiles and tomatoes are both nightshades!). I’m still not sure if Escoffier would approve or be annoyed.

To start, I stemmed and seeded a bunch of dried chiles, plunged in boiling water, removed from the heat, and let steep for 10 minutes or so.

Once steeped, I took the chiles and a couple tablespoons of water and pulsed in a mini food processor, then strained through a fine mesh to strain out the skins and any stray seeds.

Meanwhile, I took a half-pound of macaroni and boiled it for 10 minutes until tender

For the sauce, I chopped a shallot finely, and sautéed in a bit of olive oil until soft, then added chicken stock and cream and put on a low simmer.

I made a roux with olive oil and flour, barely cooked blonde

Once full of roux-ey goodness, I whisked into the sauce, added the chile, and whisked together.

I grated some Gruyère, and some Emmentaler. I like the creaminess of the Gruyère, and the swiss-like bitterness of the Emmentaler, and both melt well. About a cup of each went into the sauce.

As the cheese was melting into the sauce, I chopped the criminis and fried up the bacon, and chopped that into little pieces. I cooked down the mushrooms in the bacon fat, because why not?

Once the mushrooms and bacon were ready, I shredded up some Parmigiano Reggiano, about a cup, along with another cup of the two cheeses, Gruyère, and Emmentaler.

In a nice baking dish, I put in the cooked Mac, the mushrooms and bacon, threw on the cheeses, mixed, added the mornay/aurore, salted, added a half-lemon worth of juice, and mixed again.

A handful of Panko bread crumbs on top, and into a 375F degree oven for 20-30 minutes.

Served simply in a bowl:

Post Mortem: I’ve never used Panko before, I’ve always made my own bread crumbs from toast, or (in a pinch) Ritz crackers. There is an interesting and fun crispness to Panko, though. Is it worth the price for flakes of bread? The jury is still out. At least I still have most of a box.

Overall, I lean toward thinking this was a pretty good attempt at exploring the boundaries of comfort food. If anything, it needed a lot more salt (who would have thought, with the bacon?). There was a great zing from the chiles, the cheeses were nice, but it didn’t have that sticky cheesiness that a good mac-n-cheese should have, especially with that caramelized bubbly edge stuff. I would hesitate to add a sharp cheddar to the milder cheeses, because the sharpness would probably overwhelm the other more subtle (and, to tell the truth, expensive) cheeses…but maybe a colby or a jack or some mozzarella? I’d eat it again in a minute, but maybe more as a side-dish than a main course.

6 Responses »

  1. That looks great. I loved the step-by-step photos! Hold the bacon for me though!

  2. great photos, definitely inspiring!

  3. Who would have dreamed that Cheese and Mac could be so delicious looking. Yum!

  4. This sounds really tasty!

  5. I think cheddar would be great with the chilis! Maybe a cheddar/jack combo (oh, how I miss jack cheese!). In France we have this cumin gouda that I’ve been itching to put into something. Maybe I’ll give this a whirl.

  6. An actual recipe – in traditional format – would be useful for anyone who wants to print. PS I love-love-love panko.

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