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Make this with the full amounts of gruyere AND the pecorino, add a tablespoon of prepared dijon or spicy french-style mustard, and top with a snowy mound of buttered bread crumbs rather than cubes, and you have my famous mac & cheese. The mustard will cut the richness of the added cheese.
We all love pasta and cheese so it's impossible NOT to love this. How absolutely DELISH.
P.S I am a bit depressed about the fact that not many people read my blog, IT"S NOT CAUSE IT"S NOT GOOD. It's because I'm finding it hard 2 spread the word. It would mean the universe to me if you guys could check it out. I'm sure you will L.O.V.E it. Go to http://dandelionamazingblog.blogspot.com/
The reason I love Food52 is it's coming from REAL people as opposed to a corporate entity like Martha, Inc. I agree with Blake T3 that this should be coming from our readers as opposed to an industrial test kitchen that made up 20 or 30 versions before Martha found one to her liking (do you honestly think she actually came up with this on her own?) and was then processed/packaged for the masses.
Let's keep this real and honest not a corporate shill...
It's meant to spark conversation (like this one!) about how we all cook a particular dish, whose recipe we turn to, and what tweaks we add. It's also intended to inspire both new and experienced cooks with techniques that our editorial team considers genius, which we've sourced from outside of the Food52 community. So far that's included recipes from chefs to cookbook authors to a restaurant in Chattanooga, TN to the owner of a cooking school in Paris. You can see everything we've covered here, including a few where I was tipped off by members of the community (like Crook's Corner's Green Peach Salad or Jean Anderson's Sweet Red Pepper Paste): http://www.food52.com/blog/category/128_genius_recipes
If you're more interested in recipes from the community, there are always the biweekly contests, plus Wildcard winners, the Jenny's in the Kitchen column, as well as our new farm life column from longtime Food52 member Tom Hirschfeld. Hope you won't delete that bookmark!
I've been in corporate kitchen companies, working for the likes of Williams-Sonoma and I am in awe of the creative chefs who work there and their attention to detail. Did Martha create Mac n cheese? No. But the legacy become rich when you build on great recipes. Who wouldn't peruse America's Test Kitchen, Cooks Illustrated, etc. when it comes time to make classic Thanksgiving Turkey-Dinner, if given the chance?
Until the Internet, you had cookbooks and magazines, written and edited by publishers who had to stand behind their authors. I don't know about you, but I trust a blog recipe about the same as I trust a Yelper; I listen, but I take everything with a teaspoon of salt. I'm inspired by everyone and if you cannot find value in a recipe, or see that there are people behind it, who love what they do, then you simply don't get it.
BT Newton
And I completely agree with you -- from-scratch cooking is better for about a million reasons. Thanks for your comment!
I have made this for years -- my only tweaks are to add a good half-tablespoon of dry mustard and a bit more freshly grated nutmeg than Ms. Stewart does. Oh boy. I usually don't have bread around, so I often use panko flakes for topping. Gets nice and crunchy.
Pasta recommendation after much experimentation: Barilla Medium Shells
Completely unrelated question: Does Amanda polish her copper pots between uses? I have a few Mauviel pots and they look TERRIBLE (lighter not darker) if not polished. The ones featured in the shots above look dark, weathered and wonderful.
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