I've always been taught you put the noodles in a collinder to get the extra water out after the noodles are cooked then put it back in the pot and add all your seasoning packets, butter, extra cheese whatever else and stir as it all melts onto the noodles. Trust me on this, it tastes amazing.
Yes that's the standard way. But whenever we cook pasta we are supposed to save some of the pasta water to put back in. The starch in the water helps to emulsify the sauce or something. This method doesn't have any EXTRA water to drain off. I guess they kept measuring until they figured out the right amount. When I'm out of milk I've used plain unsweetened yogurt or sour cream instead. That makes it pretty creamy too. And I like putting some shredded cheese on top.
Why the fuck wouldn't you do that? That's how you cook pasta. You drain the water. What you just described is literally the only way to make it. Those are the instructions.
For anyone interested, the extra starch from the cooking of the pasta (which would normally be thrown out when you strain the noodles) is what makes it so creamy. It acts as an emulsifier so that the fat from the butter and cheese mixes with the water and milk to make a homogeneous sauce. That is why the instructions on the box tell you to strain the noodles, but not to rinse them. The little bit of extra starch left on the noodles helps the sauce come together. That's also what the white powder in the microwavable Easy Mac is for, starch to help make the sauce. For those who like to make it from scratch with just pasta, real cheese, and milk or cream, you can achieve similar results by adding some of the pasta cooking water back into the sauce. Start by using a little less water than you normally would to cook the pasta, then scoop the pasta out of the water when its done cooking instead of straining it into a colander. Then let the pasta water continue to boil for a couple of minutes to concentrate the startch. Save that in a heat safe bowl and pour some bit by bit into your cheese and milk mixture until you get the desired creaminess. This is also the secret to how authentic Fettuccine Alfredo is so creamy from just butter, parmesan, and a bit of hot concentrated pasta water to melt and emulsify the butter and parmesan together. Enjoy.
@@onradioactivewaves Sorry to have to give you the bad news, but if your Alfredo has heavy cream in it then it is NOT authentic Fettuccine Alfredo. You can Google it pretty easily and discover that the only ingredients are fettuccine noodles, butter, and parmesan cheese. That is literally the recipe as described by the Italian restaurant owner who created the dish. Several famous people visited Alfredo di Lelio's restaurants, including prominent Hollywood actors. When they got home to America and tried to have the dish recreated, they added heavy cream to the recipe because they were going off only a description of the dish and how it tasted and had trouble getting it right without the cream since they didn't know the process of making it. The "Alfredo" sauce most Americans are familiar with is actually closer to a mornay or bechamel sauce than the sauce on authentic Fettuccine Alfredo.
Here in Canada we have spicy Kraft Dinner. That flavor is da bomb. The noddles are thicker macaroni and the cheese powder is delish with only a tiny kick to it
I've never understood why the instructions say to drain and return the noodles to the pan when making the sauce. I drain the noodles, then use the hot empty pot to melt the butter, add the milk and cheese powder, and simmer until creamy. Then I add back in the noodles. It's so much better this way. Fun fact: Kraft Mac and Cheese in Canada used to be called Kraft Dinner, but is now simply known as KD.
This is the way I do it. I like the sauce hot and well mixed. I also add a tiny bit of cheese whiz and if feeling adventurous, a small bit of imperial cheese.
I'm all for a more rich and creamy option for Mac and Cheese, or just Kraft Dinner as we refer to it up here in Canada, so I'm gonna try it tonight. Looks delightful. :3
Here are my tips. Wait for the water to boil before adding the pasta. Once the pasta is your desired softness, drain it and then IMMEDIATELY and quickly stir the butter into the pasta. The heat from the pasta and the constant stirring emulsifies the butter. Once the butter is melted, stir in the cheese package. Once that's as mixed in as you can get, now you add the amount of milk asked on the package. You'll get the same creaminess without having to use 2 packages.
I grew up with making Kraft until I figured out I was lactose intolerant and now seeing this hurts so much Edit: Guys thanks for the tips now I can Enjoy Kraft without spending extra money on lactaid pills
jordan doesnt only give fast food hacks but also restaurant hacks, food hacks, and life hacks. He’s officially the best life hack channel there is* edit: i take that back everything is better than 5 minute crafts so he’s officially the best life hack channel there is
Just made this a couple of days ago, turned out great. The leftovers used to be too dry, but these were good still. Not as creamy left over, but still good. I added some smoked sausage for extra yum.
@@damianmlamb Never tried the cheese ones before, but maybe I'll give it a try. Though I have the other half the sausage in the freezer to use first, lol
I love the Johnsonville Better Cheddar precooked sausages. Or even a half pound of fried up bacon with all the grease. I usually add a can of bag of frozen sweet corn too.
I would suggest melting the butter and mixing it with the powdered cheese first to make sure it's all homogenized well. Then cook it all together. I have invariably had problems with powdered stuff clumping no matter how long I'd cook stuff for. Discovered if you mix the powders with fats/oils before you let water touch the powder, it mixes so much better.
After boiling the noodles, drain them in a colander and then rinse them with hot water. Now return them to the cooking pot, add 1/4 stick of butter (it's a lot, yeah) and the cheese powder then mix until the cheese is as dispersed as you can get it. Now add 1/4 cup of milk and mix again. Any unincorporated cheese powder should dissolve into the milk. Add more milk if it's too thick for your liking, but don't go overboard or the cheese will wash off your noodles
You see this is why I subbed to your channel. I’m learning so much that I’ve never found out before in my life either. I will keep this in mind. Maybe this is what they meant by Kraft being the cheesiest and many of us have been doing it wrong this whole time. 😳 Myself included. 😪
My grandma taught me to boil water with salt (however much you prefer) and wait for it to boil. I added a bit of butter to the water. Then, I cooked Kraft Dinner for 8 minutes and drained the noodles. Afterwards, I put the pot on low heat and added a generous spoonful of butter, waiting for it to melt. I poured in roughly the same amount of milk as the butter, mixed the powder with the milk and butter inside the still-hot pot until it was thick and well combined, and then added the noodles. The result tasted just like the original, despite claims it had been changed.
@@Yourlocalgay1 The salt evaporates as the water boils, it hardly affects taste If at all, It's used mostly for helping the water boil point rise faster.
@@Yourlocalgay1 I'm not trying to speed up 8-minute noodles into 1-minute & I'm not trying to pre-season my kraft dinner with a handful of salt that'll evaporate, There's hardly any effect In it's taste. What you should be asking yourself is do you wash your pasta off you're probably tasting starch assuming it's salt, or you're tasting the fuckton of salt you poured into it
@@LouMosin it is salt. Salt it like the ocean and tell me if you taste a difference. Literally cooked it today. Tastes better. Also, who in their right mind would wash off macaroni noodles from a box. Like I said before though, it doesn’t speed up the boiling. It makes it a higher temperature which means it cooks faster but the time it takes to boil isn’t affected.
I’ve been making it this way for years. With onions and garlic sautéed in a pan, the. Ground beef, then once cooked, drain fat and add to your cooked and ready Kraft dinner (that’s what we call it in canada lol)
You CAN use half the ingredient and only use 1 box, that means 1 and 1/2 cup of water, 1/2 cup of milk, 1 table spoon of butter and other spices you might want to add.
@@godlvl1 Good idea, I always double the boxes but use only one of the packets. Then I have another packet to use reg elbow noodles to make another double batch. Lowers the sodium. Taste is a little milder, but controlling the salt and making it go twice as far. -John's wife (I do this with rice mixes too.)
we buy kraft delux and add milk, butter and more cheese. honestly, i dont know why we dont just make it from scratch at that point, but it's still delicious!!
The one secret i always use is to follow the recipe on the box as-is, but replace 2tblspoons of butter with 2 ounces of cream cheese. The cream cheese packets have separators for ounces like butter does for tablespoons. Its so much better than the regular boxed mac n cheese for zero extra effort. Add pepper to taste if you dont like the creaminess as strong.
My mom doesn't use box Mac and cheese, she buys the dried pasta as you would, and makes a homemade cheese sauce (using American cheese) and it's the best ever
I normally do a lazy strain about 2 minutes shy of being done (aka not using a colander just a spoon and a gentle pouring and some skill to not spill the noodles), reserving some pasta water to finish cooking the noodles while adding the final ingredients. Works pretty good, always better than following the directions. This does look extra creamy though, probably due to the extra milk and cheese, and the gluten being more developed in the sauce due to the stirring motion. Yum.
This is what I do too unless most of the water evaporates then I don't even really need to strain it at all but cooking it in milk instead of water is delicious but not so delicious that it's worth the extra money unless maybe ur rich lol
I havent eaten kraft mac and cheese since I learned J Kenji Lopez-Alt’s recipe. One part pasta, one part cheese, one part evaporated milk. All you have to do is shallow boil the pasta until done and then throw everything in and your done. Takes 10 minutes tops and it’s fucking delicious!! You do NOT have to use American cheese either. You can use cheddar or any of your fav cheese and it will work because of the evaporated milk. P.S., It does come out cheaper per serving than 2 boxes of Kraft because of the amount of pasta you can make.
There's certainly a difference between boxed Mac & Cheese and Easy Mac but the standard box directions work just fine. As others have said when draining don't drain to fully dry and the leftover pasta water will help thicken it up. If you want to get a little fancy throwing in some extra cheese (even a kraft american single slice adds some creamy gooeyness to it) and some onion and garlic powder will enhance that cheese flavor
Hey if you use heavy cream or evaporated milk instead of regular milk, it comes out even creamier! I do it with my cheesy ranch burger helper... I'll have to try it with this now! Thanks
Thank you!!! I was preparing as follows, then I would add extra butter & cheese, I'm going to try it that way & see how we like it!!! Tamelia Bodison from Florida
You can also add a bit of canned chicken (if you don't have any leftover) and a bit of bbq sauce (i prefer sweet baby rays, but you do you) and it's Amazing!
I always just strained out the water when the noodles became al dente (slightly chewy, never mushy) since water thins the cheese flavour, stir in a bit of butter or margerine just to make sure it ain't tacky/sticky as I pour in the cheese powder (also adds a bit of saltyness to the dish), then you stir it up with just some milk to hydrate the cheese and make it a nice creamy consistency. Then after that you can toss some more cheese on top, or personally I hit it with a bit of paprika which just gives it a nice pop of flavour. Or if you're a heretical monster like most of my friends, you put ketchup on top (dunno if it's just a Canadian thing, but so many people do it).
I found this alterations from a “Thick & Creamy” version of mac’n’cheese. Double the butter, and halve the milk. Then I like to keep the burner on the lowest setting and continually stir while adding the cheese powder to remove any clumps.
If you want a Smokey/ southwest flavor, try adding some smoked paprika, a dash of garlic powder, and a dash of cumin (a little goes a long way), not sure on the measurements but if cooking one box of Mac n cheese, try about 1.5 or 2 tsp smoked paprika, 1/2 tsp of garlic powder, and either 1/4 to 1/2 tsp cumin (add a little more if you want to), enjoy!
Pro tip if you make it the traditional way: 1) Add your cheese, butter and milk only to the container you plan to store or eat the mac and cheese in. Do not put it in the pot or else you will have extra things to clean 2) As mentioned add extra cheese milk and butter for extra creamy cheesiness
Honestly if you use one of the noodles from a box for something else, then use 2 cheese packets on one box with just a square and a half of butter (no water milk) and stir until it melts together it's pretty epic. You could alternatively use one box of regular and 2 boxes of twisty kind, then use about 2 squares of butter and turn some powdered leche into liquid again and mix that in until you get your desired consistency, it's pretty bomb.
Whatever you do, DO NOT MAKE THIS RECIPE. You’ll waste 2 perfectly good boxes of Kraft and completely ruin the bottom of your pot. It doesn’t even taste better than normal Kraft. Take it from me, I learned my lesson.
Make the noodles regular first, strain them. Then pour heavy cream into the pot/ pan and heat it up until the milk fats on the edge start to turn yellow in color, then add your noodles. Then add your cheese and stir, add extra cheese if you want. Thank me later. Heating up the cream with the noodles is the trick 🫡
I would always add salt, oil and butter to the water before boiling. Then once I put in the macaroni and it gets tender I grab 1.5 cups of the liquid and drain the rest. Put the liquid in the pan, more butter, cheese seasoning and cooked macaroni and stir till covered, slowly adding shredded cheese
I grew up on kraft mac and cheese and believe i perfected it, and my family agrees. Heres how: bring ur water to a boil, add noodles, stir and set timer now for 7 mins. Reduce heat to med low. Stir once or twice during 7 mins. When the timer goes off, drain. Return noodle to pot and burner which u turn-off but is still hot. Stir the noodles for about a min or until they make the sticky noise and start sticking to the spoon. Add 4 tbs of butter. Stir until mostly melted. Add milk and cheese packet and stir til mixed. The key is to get all the water cooked off.
tossing in a couple of kraft singles and reserving a half cup of the boiling liquid does the same thing if you boil as directed, drain, toss back into pot, add milk, 2 to 3 cheese slices, reserved pasta water, and butter and stir on a low heat. dont add in the cheese powder packet until butter has melted and liquids are steaming (not boiling!). you also get the added benefit of pasta that isnt too mushy lol
I tried this tonight and I'm sold on it. The texture and sauce was a little better. Noodles were perfectly cooked with 8 mins, simmer was 6/max on stove setting, stir often.
how i do it is ... boil noodles tell softer but still chewy (to soft = mush) generally throw one or two at wall for stick/no stick test (stick=good) strain water add butter (put butter under noodles for melting easy) mix butter to coat noodles add bit of milk and the cheese packets (Milk helps prevent clumping cheese) mix enjoy
I'm 33 and the best way to make it for me is cook, drain, add back to pot, add a bunch of butter, the powered cheese, mix, mix, mix.. then add a bunch of sharp shredded cheddar and a touch of heavy cream if you like it creamier. Add salt, pepper, etc. Sometimes I add paprika, cayenne, a dash of nutmeg. So creamy and comforting
Just tried this and it was great! But my wife and my favorite way to have boxed Mac and cheese was made by accident. I made it according to the box but then brown the butter before adding in the milk and cheese mixing with the noodles. It is sooooooooo good!
Jordan, if you see this, you should try it, it's actually really good My grandma can make really creamy and delicious kraft mac and cheese. It's basically the recipe on the side of the box, boil water at medium heat, add the macaroni and boil for 7 mins, drain the water, add 4 tbsp of butter, 1/4 cups of milk, then add the cheese, but my grandma stirs around 4-5 times every minute, adds butter instead of margarine, and adds a full cup of milk. If it isn't creamy enough, then maybe another 1/4 to 1/2 cup of milk or another tbsp of butter. It's easy to eat, and it tastes really good. Try it out.
Bring back kraft mac and cheese deluxe the one that came with a tin can of cheese and not the powdery stuff. The texture does look similar to old mac n cheese deluxe so definetly gunna try this way since Jordan hasnt failed me yet. You the man Jordan
Used to make it boxed way and it was good. Tried this way and just as good but without having to strain anything. I did do it differently though. 1 box I wanted mushrooms so I cut and started to sautée my fungi with the amount of butter (a little over half a stick because mushrooms.) then I dumped in 2 cups of liquid (about 2/3 water the rest whole milk) and crumbled in a healthy amount of extra sharp white cheddar. Sat and pepper, stir, stir, stir. And all done! Creamy, tender and delicious. I’m sure I could have detailed it better but I’m currently eating it while it’s still hot.
I never had different ways to cook the mac and cheese, just things to add. I found the best way to make it when you're just having it straight is after draining the noodles, add the butter to the pan first and stir until fully mixed, then add the milk SLOWLY, a few tablespoons at a time (ish) and mix until the powder is fully mixed in. It gets super cheesy. If you're looking to add protein, hot dogs, sliced turkey, bacon, oe tuna are great to add. If you want something green, cut up some broccoli and add that to the water before you turn on heat so it has time to get fully cooked (the noodles get added once the water boils but you do not remove the broccoli).
Hey guys, A Chef here, little tip, while the cream and butter are reducing, throw in some smoked gouda, you can get it somewhere like Walmart, trust me on this.
I see a lot of good advice here in the comments. I personally am a fan of draining the water and saving a bit aside to make the cheese but I also rinse the noodles afterward to get rid of the starch and firm the noodle. When recombined with the starched sauce it attracts to the noodle and hits differently on the taste buds (which Jordan no longer has). Also, don't be afraid to put a bunch of Parmesan cheese in it, make sure it's melted (like Jordan's taste buds) and hit it all with a bit of white pepper if you got it, black is good too. Also tempering your water with tabasco will give it a tang that is subtle but you'll miss it when it's gone (like Jordan's taste buds). :)
@@peehandshihtzu what do you think of adding onion powder? While I'm at it, why not BBQ dry rub seasoning or chili-con-carne seasoning? Damn, now that has me thinking of using a can of chili-con-carne with mac to make a sort of shortcut version of hamburger helper... but spicy. I have absolutely zero clue whether this would work... and I'm wondering. Hmmmm... dammit that's not keto. Grrrr...
Super simple mac and cheese: Equal quantities (by weight) of pasta, evaporated milk, and grated chedddar (or a mix of cheeses, but make sure plenty of cheddar). Cook pasta until almost al dente, drain (saving a cup of so of cooking water) put back in pot, add evap milk, add cheese gradually, stirring. Add cooking water if needed to loosen sauce. Add in any other seasoning or topping as desired. Fast, foolproof, amazingly good.
I let the water boil with a pinch of salt, then add the pasta. When the pasta is cooked, I drain almost all the liquid (I leave about a tablespoon of the water in the pot). I then add the butter so it'll melt, then the milk and cheese. Leaving a little of the starchy water helps the cheese sauce stick to the noodles.
I’ve seen a hack where you use a sauce pan, then add just enough water to cover the noodles, add the cheese packet, butter, and seasonings, then after it starts to get real thick put in some milk, and stir until your desired thickness of sauce
kraft last time I tasted was just orange dyed mystery powder that wasnt cheese. probably sawdust, tasted like regular boiled noodles with orange coloring. no cheese, just color.
Tried it, the noodles are massively overcooked. The better way would be the have a separate pot with the milk, cheese, and butter, mixed with a little bit of black pepper, simmer that until it reduces, then cook your noodles until they're aldente. At that point, strain the water out from the noodles, then mix the noodles into the glorious cheese pot.
- Boil the noodles - Drain, save a cup of the water - Use the half stick butter, melt in the pan with a tablespoon of flour, stir and cook - Add the 1/3 cup milk or w/e the package says, more if necessary to to dissolve - once dissolved, cook for another two minutes, add cheese pouch, add any extra cheese desired. - add noodles back into pan, stir, add pasta water in splashes until desired consistency is reached *** This way you're not using two boxes or playing the "add just enough water to cook the pasta and bond the sauce" game.
I make it per the instructions but I add 1 or 2 tablespoons of cheese whiz. Also massive 1 tbsp of imperial sharp cheddar. Fantastic. And tons of pepper.
So I made it the way you said and added salt, white pepper and paprika with extra Colby jack cheese. Omg never doing this the old way again !!! Million times better !!!
I sometimes add a touch of sour cream.. it's been ages since I made it.. I used to make that for my wife, with some hamburger thrown in. It was our comfort food and struggle meal. Damnit, now I has a sad *and* I'm hungry. You're still awesome, Jordaan.
After I make mac and cheese the normal way I put it all in a casserole dish with italian breadcrumbs and shredded cheddar cheese and bake it at 350 F for an extra 10 minutes. It's pretty tasty!
Honestly, homemade mac and cheese is just as easy to make as boxed mac. The key is using American cheese. - Make your noodles of choice - Don't completely drain the noodles, or even better if you use less water to begin with and don't drain at all, Italian style. Just a little bit of pasta water helps. - Add heavy cream - Tear up some American cheese slices and stir it in until melted together - Play with the consistency until it's a little runnier than you'd like (it'll thicken when it cools) - Top with a little shredded cheese if you want. - Mac and cheese! You can also add other cheeses, but if you do, I would make the sauce in a separate pot. The processed salts in the American cheese should work their magic on those cheeses too, but sometimes they just won't want to come together and end up making a lumpy sauce. Avoid really hard cheeses and pre-shredded cheese, do at least a 1:1 American to all other cheese, and stir constantly.
Did this man say he been making Easy mac? Lol I rarely eat box mac. I did growing up but now a days the only mac I eat is home made, Panera Bread, Chick-Fil-A, Popeyes new one, Outback Steak House, S'Mac in New York. Anyone try those, they won't regret it.
I've always been taught you put the noodles in a collinder to get the extra water out after the noodles are cooked then put it back in the pot and add all your seasoning packets, butter, extra cheese whatever else and stir as it all melts onto the noodles. Trust me on this, it tastes amazing.
Yes that's the standard way. But whenever we cook pasta we are supposed to save some of the pasta water to put back in. The starch in the water helps to emulsify the sauce or something.
This method doesn't have any EXTRA water to drain off. I guess they kept measuring until they figured out the right amount.
When I'm out of milk I've used plain unsweetened yogurt or sour cream instead. That makes it pretty creamy too. And I like putting some shredded cheese on top.
Why the fuck wouldn't you do that? That's how you cook pasta. You drain the water.
What you just described is literally the only way to make it. Those are the instructions.
you missing out on that pasta water
PEOPLE AREN'T STRAINING THEIR MAC & CHEESE?! 😱
I was taught to bring the water to a boil 1st then add the pasta/elbows. 🤯
For anyone interested, the extra starch from the cooking of the pasta (which would normally be thrown out when you strain the noodles) is what makes it so creamy. It acts as an emulsifier so that the fat from the butter and cheese mixes with the water and milk to make a homogeneous sauce. That is why the instructions on the box tell you to strain the noodles, but not to rinse them. The little bit of extra starch left on the noodles helps the sauce come together. That's also what the white powder in the microwavable Easy Mac is for, starch to help make the sauce.
For those who like to make it from scratch with just pasta, real cheese, and milk or cream, you can achieve similar results by adding some of the pasta cooking water back into the sauce. Start by using a little less water than you normally would to cook the pasta, then scoop the pasta out of the water when its done cooking instead of straining it into a colander. Then let the pasta water continue to boil for a couple of minutes to concentrate the startch. Save that in a heat safe bowl and pour some bit by bit into your cheese and milk mixture until you get the desired creaminess. This is also the secret to how authentic Fettuccine Alfredo is so creamy from just butter, parmesan, and a bit of hot concentrated pasta water to melt and emulsify the butter and parmesan together. Enjoy.
Thank you for these tips!
@@Trauma_Economy You're welcome!
I love it when someone gives the chem side of it🥰
Everything you said sounded ok EXCEPT that my authentic Alfredo definitely also uses a large amount of heavy cream.
@@onradioactivewaves Sorry to have to give you the bad news, but if your Alfredo has heavy cream in it then it is NOT authentic Fettuccine Alfredo. You can Google it pretty easily and discover that the only ingredients are fettuccine noodles, butter, and parmesan cheese. That is literally the recipe as described by the Italian restaurant owner who created the dish. Several famous people visited Alfredo di Lelio's restaurants, including prominent Hollywood actors. When they got home to America and tried to have the dish recreated, they added heavy cream to the recipe because they were going off only a description of the dish and how it tasted and had trouble getting it right without the cream since they didn't know the process of making it. The "Alfredo" sauce most Americans are familiar with is actually closer to a mornay or bechamel sauce than the sauce on authentic Fettuccine Alfredo.
If you start making the boxed variety I recommend shells and cheese, shells have such a nice texture and become little cheese bowls.
I love shells
Bruh both of you joined youtube when I was like 8 😂
@@itsshrimp91 yeah? Can't like or comment on videos otherwise
@@spookyplaguedoctor5714 hey no offense meant, I just find it insane how old youtube is, which with me being 19, feels ancient.
Here in Canada we have spicy Kraft Dinner. That flavor is da bomb. The noddles are thicker macaroni and the cheese powder is delish with only a tiny kick to it
I've never understood why the instructions say to drain and return the noodles to the pan when making the sauce. I drain the noodles, then use the hot empty pot to melt the butter, add the milk and cheese powder, and simmer until creamy. Then I add back in the noodles. It's so much better this way.
Fun fact: Kraft Mac and Cheese in Canada used to be called Kraft Dinner, but is now simply known as KD.
Same!!!! I've been doing it this way for years!
I used to drain the water. Thanks for letting me know I was doing it wrong.
Kevin Durant?
Kraft/Dinner ratio?
This is the way I do it. I like the sauce hot and well mixed. I also add a tiny bit of cheese whiz and if feeling adventurous, a small bit of imperial cheese.
I'm all for a more rich and creamy option for Mac and Cheese, or just Kraft Dinner as we refer to it up here in Canada, so I'm gonna try it tonight. Looks delightful. :3
Another fun fact: Canadians eat the most Kraft Mac and Cheese out of any country in the world. 55% more annually than Americans!
We love our KD 🧡
@@MsOkayAwesomeGotta be KD c:
@@Just_a_commenterhow did it taste?
Here are my tips. Wait for the water to boil before adding the pasta. Once the pasta is your desired softness, drain it and then IMMEDIATELY and quickly stir the butter into the pasta. The heat from the pasta and the constant stirring emulsifies the butter. Once the butter is melted, stir in the cheese package. Once that's as mixed in as you can get, now you add the amount of milk asked on the package. You'll get the same creaminess without having to use 2 packages.
So the regular way then
@@PoorMan84Lol right
Best way is to skip the milk and add a ton of shredded cheddar cheese and a dash of heavy cream. Adding milk to it makes it so soupy and flavorless 🤮
@@Ena48145 lol long explanation to say just do it regular and you'll get the same results less soupy
I honestly thought everyone did it this way
"When you make the grown up version"
Sir, all mac n' cheese is super sophisticated at any age. I will die on this hill! 🧀 🤣🤣🤣
Word. When I finally get rich, I'll just buy more boxes of mac n' cheese.
@@Snarkyhippie lolol 🤣😂😆!
So true! Have a little extra for groceries, stock up on more mac n cheese!
I grew up with making Kraft until I figured out I was lactose intolerant and now seeing this hurts so much
Edit: Guys thanks for the tips now I can Enjoy Kraft without spending extra money on lactaid pills
Get u some Lactaid pills. Take one before eating. Then no problems later. 😊
Use a non dairy milk. That’s what I do
Thanks for the tip
@@Aceofbase123 np
@Porows I keep a few in my purse for cheesecake or ice cream too. 😋
jordan doesnt only give fast food hacks but also restaurant hacks, food hacks, and life hacks. He’s officially the best life hack channel there is*
edit: i take that back everything is better than 5 minute crafts so he’s officially the best life hack channel there is
He's the live saver of RUclips shorts
True
Nah he always was better than 5 minute craft.
Everything is better than 5 minute crafts and 5 minute crafts is just every useless and dumb diy project
@@xtxerm4101 fair i was just saying that he’s 5 minute crafts (as in life hacks) but way better.
Thank you Jordan by showing us the ways of your mistakes and your knowledge
The fact that he just straight up ate it while it was steaming 💀
THAT WOULD HURT
Ikr.
Who needs taste buds? It's all about the texture! :)
@@peehandshihtzu 😢😢😢
@@Judgemenalspider 😅😅😅
Just made this a couple of days ago, turned out great. The leftovers used to be too dry, but these were good still. Not as creamy left over, but still good. I added some smoked sausage for extra yum.
Brooooooooo try Oscar Mayer cheese Hot Dogs sliced up I bet it'll melt your mind
@@damianmlamb Never tried the cheese ones before, but maybe I'll give it a try. Though I have the other half the sausage in the freezer to use first, lol
I love the Johnsonville Better Cheddar precooked sausages. Or even a half pound of fried up bacon with all the grease. I usually add a can of bag of frozen sweet corn too.
I LOVE THE “come here.” AHHHHH!
edit: in chef jordan we trust! 💯
I would suggest melting the butter and mixing it with the powdered cheese first to make sure it's all homogenized well. Then cook it all together. I have invariably had problems with powdered stuff clumping no matter how long I'd cook stuff for. Discovered if you mix the powders with fats/oils before you let water touch the powder, it mixes so much better.
After boiling the noodles, drain them in a colander and then rinse them with hot water. Now return them to the cooking pot, add 1/4 stick of butter (it's a lot, yeah) and the cheese powder then mix until the cheese is as dispersed as you can get it. Now add 1/4 cup of milk and mix again. Any unincorporated cheese powder should dissolve into the milk. Add more milk if it's too thick for your liking, but don't go overboard or the cheese will wash off your noodles
Gotta mix soon at it hits the liquid your not being fast enough
I followed you instructions to a T, total game changer. I didn't have cheddar cheese so I used Mozzarella. It was SOOOOOO GOOOOD!!❤❤❤
You see this is why I subbed to your channel. I’m learning so much that I’ve never found out before in my life either. I will keep this in mind. Maybe this is what they meant by Kraft being the cheesiest and many of us have been doing it wrong this whole time. 😳 Myself included. 😪
Ok ?
That looks delicious! I learnt to make it in a similar way, but no water, just milk (one box = two cups of milk), and add additional cheese.
Is additional cheese necessary??
@@RyonMugen You can never have too much cheese. 😜
If I saw literally anyone else do this I wouldnt trust them, for some reason I just trust this man
Eventually a company will buy him and he'll use his powers for evil marketing practices. I mean it always ends up that way. :)
@@peehandshihtzuwhen that happens, it's up to us to continue the legacy...
@@adventofnull LOL, I hope it doesn't. :)
Riiiight, the starch in the pasta water is incorporated into the sauce this way, brilliant 👏 ❤
My grandma taught me to boil water with salt (however much you prefer) and wait for it to boil. I added a bit of butter to the water. Then, I cooked Kraft Dinner for 8 minutes and drained the noodles. Afterwards, I put the pot on low heat and added a generous spoonful of butter, waiting for it to melt. I poured in roughly the same amount of milk as the butter, mixed the powder with the milk and butter inside the still-hot pot until it was thick and well combined, and then added the noodles. The result tasted just like the original, despite claims it had been changed.
Well the correct amount of salt is make it taste like the ocean but I’m Italian so you do you lol
@@Yourlocalgay1 The salt evaporates as the water boils, it hardly affects taste If at all, It's used mostly for helping the water boil point rise faster.
@@LouMosin it does affect the taste you’re not adding enough. It’s goal isn’t to help the water boil it’s to season the noodles before you add sauce
@@Yourlocalgay1
I'm not trying to speed up 8-minute noodles
into 1-minute & I'm not trying
to pre-season my kraft dinner with a handful of salt that'll evaporate,
There's hardly any effect In it's taste.
What you should be asking yourself is do you wash your pasta off
you're probably tasting starch assuming it's salt,
or you're tasting the fuckton of salt you poured into it
@@LouMosin it is salt. Salt it like the ocean and tell me if you taste a difference. Literally cooked it today. Tastes better. Also, who in their right mind would wash off macaroni noodles from a box. Like I said before though, it doesn’t speed up the boiling. It makes it a higher temperature which means it cooks faster but the time it takes to boil isn’t affected.
I’ve been making it this way for years. With onions and garlic sautéed in a pan, the. Ground beef, then once cooked, drain fat and add to your cooked and ready Kraft dinner (that’s what we call it in canada lol)
Add a zip of Worcestershire sauce for a little bit of. Oh yeah with out too much extra work. :-) Gives it that hamburger helper taste.
You CAN use half the ingredient and only use 1 box, that means 1 and 1/2 cup of water, 1/2 cup of milk, 1 table spoon of butter and other spices you might want to add.
@@godlvl1 Good idea, I always double the boxes but use only one of the packets. Then I have another packet to use reg elbow noodles to make another double batch. Lowers the sodium. Taste is a little milder, but controlling the salt and making it go twice as far. -John's wife (I do this with rice mixes too.)
Just made this, and I’ve gotta say, adding shredded cheese to the mix really made it something special
My stomach’s already bubbling looking at that
we buy kraft delux and add milk, butter and more cheese. honestly, i dont know why we dont just make it from scratch at that point, but it's still delicious!!
The one secret i always use is to follow the recipe on the box as-is, but replace 2tblspoons of butter with 2 ounces of cream cheese. The cream cheese packets have separators for ounces like butter does for tablespoons. Its so much better than the regular boxed mac n cheese for zero extra effort. Add pepper to taste if you dont like the creaminess as strong.
There it is! Yep cream cheese so much better than butter
why not both?@@katherinegaston5229
My mom doesn't use box Mac and cheese, she buys the dried pasta as you would, and makes a homemade cheese sauce (using American cheese) and it's the best ever
I normally do a lazy strain about 2 minutes shy of being done (aka not using a colander just a spoon and a gentle pouring and some skill to not spill the noodles), reserving some pasta water to finish cooking the noodles while adding the final ingredients. Works pretty good, always better than following the directions.
This does look extra creamy though, probably due to the extra milk and cheese, and the gluten being more developed in the sauce due to the stirring motion. Yum.
This is what I do too unless most of the water evaporates then I don't even really need to strain it at all but cooking it in milk instead of water is delicious but not so delicious that it's worth the extra money unless maybe ur rich lol
Or own ur own cow
I havent eaten kraft mac and cheese since I learned J Kenji Lopez-Alt’s recipe. One part pasta, one part cheese, one part evaporated milk. All you have to do is shallow boil the pasta until done and then throw everything in and your done. Takes 10 minutes tops and it’s fucking delicious!! You do NOT have to use American cheese either. You can use cheddar or any of your fav cheese and it will work because of the evaporated milk.
P.S.,
It does come out cheaper per serving than 2 boxes of Kraft because of the amount of pasta you can make.
There's certainly a difference between boxed Mac & Cheese and Easy Mac but the standard box directions work just fine. As others have said when draining don't drain to fully dry and the leftover pasta water will help thicken it up.
If you want to get a little fancy throwing in some extra cheese (even a kraft american single slice adds some creamy gooeyness to it) and some onion and garlic powder will enhance that cheese flavor
Hey if you use heavy cream or evaporated milk instead of regular milk, it comes out even creamier! I do it with my cheesy ranch burger helper... I'll have to try it with this now! Thanks
@@dozierleigh2980 I said evaporated, not condensed
@@dozierleigh2980mf is dyslexic
My bad lol
Okay, this may sound a bit weird, but if you add a nice, generous spoonful of cream cheese to your mac and cheese- absolutely delicious.
Thank you!!! I was preparing as follows, then I would add extra butter & cheese, I'm going to try it that way & see how we like it!!! Tamelia Bodison from Florida
We’ve been cooking Mac n cheese like this since I was a kid. Only difference, we would boil in water, strain, then add milk and butter/cheese.
Isn’t that the normal recipe right?
You can also add a bit of canned chicken (if you don't have any leftover) and a bit of bbq sauce (i prefer sweet baby rays, but you do you) and it's Amazing!
I always just strained out the water when the noodles became al dente (slightly chewy, never mushy) since water thins the cheese flavour, stir in a bit of butter or margerine just to make sure it ain't tacky/sticky as I pour in the cheese powder (also adds a bit of saltyness to the dish), then you stir it up with just some milk to hydrate the cheese and make it a nice creamy consistency.
Then after that you can toss some more cheese on top, or personally I hit it with a bit of paprika which just gives it a nice pop of flavour. Or if you're a heretical monster like most of my friends, you put ketchup on top (dunno if it's just a Canadian thing, but so many people do it).
I found this alterations from a “Thick & Creamy” version of mac’n’cheese.
Double the butter, and halve the milk.
Then I like to keep the burner on the lowest setting and continually stir while adding the cheese powder to remove any clumps.
he seems deeply disturbed he’s been doing it wrong.
Yum I made this for My dad's birthday it turned out great 😋 thanks for the recipe @Jordan😁
Just the fact that you called a box of Mac and cheese, "the grown up version", does not fill me with hope for society.
🤓
What grinds my gears is when people call pasta noodles.. we're not making ramen, or pho for instance 🤷🏻♀️
If you want a Smokey/ southwest flavor, try adding some smoked paprika, a dash of garlic powder, and a dash of cumin (a little goes a long way), not sure on the measurements but if cooking one box of Mac n cheese, try about 1.5 or 2 tsp smoked paprika, 1/2 tsp of garlic powder, and either 1/4 to 1/2 tsp cumin (add a little more if you want to), enjoy!
Pro tip if you make it the traditional way:
1) Add your cheese, butter and milk only to the container you plan to store or eat the mac and cheese in. Do not put it in the pot or else you will have extra things to clean
2) As mentioned add extra cheese milk and butter for extra creamy cheesiness
@@tomdahm8447I guess they just mean it's easier to clean a pot that just had pasta water in it than the cheese sauce.
Honestly if you use one of the noodles from a box for something else, then use 2 cheese packets on one box with just a square and a half of butter (no water milk) and stir until it melts together it's pretty epic. You could alternatively use one box of regular and 2 boxes of twisty kind, then use about 2 squares of butter and turn some powdered leche into liquid again and mix that in until you get your desired consistency, it's pretty bomb.
Whatever you do, DO NOT MAKE THIS RECIPE. You’ll waste 2 perfectly good boxes of Kraft and completely ruin the bottom of your pot. It doesn’t even taste better than normal Kraft. Take it from me, I learned my lesson.
lol no
If you do it right it’s really good
every time you call pasta "noodles" a thousand italian grandmas pass away tragically
"Add some extra cheese in there."
"It aint gon go down easy if it aint cheesy!"
This one of the most informative channel on RUclips
LOL " the adult version from the box " You crack me up 😆😆🤫🤫but thanks for the tip
i always liked using the cheese powder and butter to make a rue then add the milk to make the sauce, it always seemed to add a bit of extra flavor.
I think that it's spelled 'roux'! XD It's a French word!
He just made me hungry.
This is the earliest I have ever been on a video by the President of the Fast Food Secrets Club!
First bit golden second bit heaven
I just tried it, absolutely amazing! It makes it SO much better! This is the way I make it now
This video has been on the back of my mind for months now. I just did it. Holy fuck thank you it's SO GOOD
you've now unlocked. Canadian kraft dinner as we've always used this method lmao
Make the noodles regular first, strain them. Then pour heavy cream into the pot/ pan and heat it up until the milk fats on the edge start to turn yellow in color, then add your noodles. Then add your cheese and stir, add extra cheese if you want. Thank me later. Heating up the cream with the noodles is the trick 🫡
I’ve been eating Kraft for years and can confirm they have changed their recipe. The new box type powder is totally different.
I just been fiending for Mac and cheese and low and behold Jordan pops up with this
I would always add salt, oil and butter to the water before boiling. Then once I put in the macaroni and it gets tender I grab 1.5 cups of the liquid and drain the rest. Put the liquid in the pan, more butter, cheese seasoning and cooked macaroni and stir till covered, slowly adding shredded cheese
I love how he says “comehur” to his reflection
I grew up on kraft mac and cheese and believe i perfected it, and my family agrees. Heres how: bring ur water to a boil, add noodles, stir and set timer now for 7 mins. Reduce heat to med low. Stir once or twice during 7 mins. When the timer goes off, drain. Return noodle to pot and burner which u turn-off but is still hot. Stir the noodles for about a min or until they make the sticky noise and start sticking to the spoon. Add 4 tbs of butter. Stir until mostly melted. Add milk and cheese packet and stir til mixed. The key is to get all the water cooked off.
tossing in a couple of kraft singles and reserving a half cup of the boiling liquid does the same thing if you boil as directed, drain, toss back into pot, add milk, 2 to 3 cheese slices, reserved pasta water, and butter and stir on a low heat. dont add in the cheese powder packet until butter has melted and liquids are steaming (not boiling!). you also get the added benefit of pasta that isnt too mushy lol
I tried this tonight and I'm sold on it. The texture and sauce was a little better. Noodles were perfectly cooked with 8 mins, simmer was 6/max on stove setting, stir often.
You should try Velveeta and shells. I've been doing it for years and add a can of Rotell (drained) you will love it. 🥰
The only kind of mac n cheese I can eat these days in these trying times of fake food.
@@IvanOoze1990 it's not fake if you can eat it
Jordan be trying everything
how i do it is ... boil noodles tell softer but still chewy (to soft = mush) generally throw one or two at wall for stick/no stick test (stick=good) strain water add butter (put butter under noodles for melting easy) mix butter to coat noodles add bit of milk and the cheese packets (Milk helps prevent clumping cheese) mix enjoy
I'm 33 and the best way to make it for me is cook, drain, add back to pot, add a bunch of butter, the powered cheese, mix, mix, mix.. then add a bunch of sharp shredded cheddar and a touch of heavy cream if you like it creamier. Add salt, pepper, etc. Sometimes I add paprika, cayenne, a dash of nutmeg. So creamy and comforting
Just tried this and it was great! But my wife and my favorite way to have boxed Mac and cheese was made by accident. I made it according to the box but then brown the butter before adding in the milk and cheese mixing with the noodles. It is sooooooooo good!
There is a Greek macaroni dish where you brown the butter, then add a sharp/tangy grated cheese. That's delicious like your variation.
My mother did this and I'm just now realizing why it was so good!!! She always so much at once to freeze. Good looking out Jordie!
Jordan, if you see this, you should try it, it's actually really good
My grandma can make really creamy and delicious kraft mac and cheese. It's basically the recipe on the side of the box, boil water at medium heat, add the macaroni and boil for 7 mins, drain the water, add 4 tbsp of butter, 1/4 cups of milk, then add the cheese, but my grandma stirs around 4-5 times every minute, adds butter instead of margarine, and adds a full cup of milk. If it isn't creamy enough, then maybe another 1/4 to 1/2 cup of milk or another tbsp of butter. It's easy to eat, and it tastes really good. Try it out.
If you want it even thicker add powdered parmesan. Most parmesan is dried out sort absorbs what little moisture is left
Bring back kraft mac and cheese deluxe the one that came with a tin can of cheese and not the powdery stuff. The texture does look similar to old mac n cheese deluxe so definetly gunna try this way since Jordan hasnt failed me yet. You the man Jordan
Used to make it boxed way and it was good. Tried this way and just as good but without having to strain anything.
I did do it differently though.
1 box
I wanted mushrooms so I cut and started to sautée my fungi with the amount of butter (a little over half a stick because mushrooms.) then I dumped in 2 cups of liquid (about 2/3 water the rest whole milk) and crumbled in a healthy amount of extra sharp white cheddar.
Sat and pepper, stir, stir, stir. And all done! Creamy, tender and delicious.
I’m sure I could have detailed it better but I’m currently eating it while it’s still hot.
I never had different ways to cook the mac and cheese, just things to add. I found the best way to make it when you're just having it straight is after draining the noodles, add the butter to the pan first and stir until fully mixed, then add the milk SLOWLY, a few tablespoons at a time (ish) and mix until the powder is fully mixed in. It gets super cheesy.
If you're looking to add protein, hot dogs, sliced turkey, bacon, oe tuna are great to add. If you want something green, cut up some broccoli and add that to the water before you turn on heat so it has time to get fully cooked (the noodles get added once the water boils but you do not remove the broccoli).
“I’ve been making [Insert Food] the wrong way for my entire life.”
Hey guys, A Chef here, little tip, while the cream and butter are reducing, throw in some smoked gouda, you can get it somewhere like Walmart, trust me on this.
That feeling when you scroll, followed by the realization that this isn't a short.
I see a lot of good advice here in the comments. I personally am a fan of draining the water and saving a bit aside to make the cheese but I also rinse the noodles afterward to get rid of the starch and firm the noodle. When recombined with the starched sauce it attracts to the noodle and hits differently on the taste buds (which Jordan no longer has).
Also, don't be afraid to put a bunch of Parmesan cheese in it, make sure it's melted (like Jordan's taste buds) and hit it all with a bit of white pepper if you got it, black is good too.
Also tempering your water with tabasco will give it a tang that is subtle but you'll miss it when it's gone (like Jordan's taste buds). :)
OHHHH I never thought to but the hot sauce in the water I'm gonna try that next time 😂😂
@@maryhanusin5953 It takes a bit of experimentation to get the amount to taste but it is good once you get it. :)
@@peehandshihtzu what do you think of adding onion powder? While I'm at it, why not BBQ dry rub seasoning or chili-con-carne seasoning?
Damn, now that has me thinking of using a can of chili-con-carne with mac to make a sort of shortcut version of hamburger helper... but spicy. I have absolutely zero clue whether this would work... and I'm wondering.
Hmmmm... dammit that's not keto. Grrrr...
@@OhPervyOne Yes! Try it! Keto can wait, LOL. :)
@peehandshihtzu You can say joke once, repeating the joke doesn't make it funnier but boring (just like You) 😊
"The grown up version" about boxed macaroni and cheese is hilarious.
I swear this guy could tell me dinosaurs are still alive and i would believe it no questions asked
Super simple mac and cheese: Equal quantities (by weight) of pasta, evaporated milk, and grated chedddar (or a mix of cheeses, but make sure plenty of cheddar).
Cook pasta until almost al dente, drain (saving a cup of so of cooking water) put back in pot, add evap milk, add cheese gradually, stirring. Add cooking water if needed to loosen sauce. Add in any other seasoning or topping as desired.
Fast, foolproof, amazingly good.
I just made it like this. I will never make mac and cheese another way. Ever again. This is the best bowl I've had in a long time.
I let the water boil with a pinch of salt, then add the pasta. When the pasta is cooked, I drain almost all the liquid (I leave about a tablespoon of the water in the pot). I then add the butter so it'll melt, then the milk and cheese. Leaving a little of the starchy water helps the cheese sauce stick to the noodles.
I watch all your videos & believe Your production style is fantastic.
I’ve seen a hack where you use a sauce pan, then add just enough water to cover the noodles, add the cheese packet, butter, and seasonings, then after it starts to get real thick put in some milk, and stir until your desired thickness of sauce
I trust this man with my life.
I learned a valuable piece of information today
FYI, east of the Mississippi, a stick of butter is twice as big as a west coast butter stick. So if you’re east coast, use a quarter stick of butter.
kraft last time I tasted was just orange dyed mystery powder that wasnt cheese. probably sawdust, tasted like regular boiled noodles with orange coloring. no cheese, just color.
To quote the Mandalorian:
"This is the way"
Tried it, the noodles are massively overcooked. The better way would be the have a separate pot with the milk, cheese, and butter, mixed with a little bit of black pepper, simmer that until it reduces, then cook your noodles until they're aldente. At that point, strain the water out from the noodles, then mix the noodles into the glorious cheese pot.
OMG this looks so much better than just boiling the noodles and then adding the cheese powder afterwards...
- Boil the noodles
- Drain, save a cup of the water
- Use the half stick butter, melt in the pan with a tablespoon of flour, stir and cook
- Add the 1/3 cup milk or w/e the package says, more if necessary to to dissolve
- once dissolved, cook for another two minutes, add cheese pouch, add any extra cheese desired.
- add noodles back into pan, stir, add pasta water in splashes until desired consistency is reached
***
This way you're not using two boxes or playing the "add just enough water to cook the pasta and bond the sauce" game.
I make it per the instructions but I add 1 or 2 tablespoons of cheese whiz. Also massive 1 tbsp of imperial sharp cheddar. Fantastic. And tons of pepper.
So I made it the way you said and added salt, white pepper and paprika with extra Colby jack cheese. Omg never doing this the old way again !!! Million times better !!!
cook as normal in plain water ... leave "small amount" of pasta water - ADD 1 heaping spoonful of mayonaise & stir .. then add seasoning mix.
I sometimes add a touch of sour cream.. it's been ages since I made it.. I used to make that for my wife, with some hamburger thrown in. It was our comfort food and struggle meal.
Damnit, now I has a sad *and* I'm hungry.
You're still awesome, Jordaan.
After I make mac and cheese the normal way I put it all in a casserole dish with italian breadcrumbs and shredded cheddar cheese and bake it at 350 F for an extra 10 minutes. It's pretty tasty!
Honestly, homemade mac and cheese is just as easy to make as boxed mac. The key is using American cheese.
- Make your noodles of choice
- Don't completely drain the noodles, or even better if you use less water to begin with and don't drain at all, Italian style. Just a little bit of pasta water helps.
- Add heavy cream
- Tear up some American cheese slices and stir it in until melted together
- Play with the consistency until it's a little runnier than you'd like (it'll thicken when it cools)
- Top with a little shredded cheese if you want.
- Mac and cheese!
You can also add other cheeses, but if you do, I would make the sauce in a separate pot. The processed salts in the American cheese should work their magic on those cheeses too, but sometimes they just won't want to come together and end up making a lumpy sauce. Avoid really hard cheeses and pre-shredded cheese, do at least a 1:1 American to all other cheese, and stir constantly.
Did this man say he been making Easy mac? Lol I rarely eat box mac. I did growing up but now a days the only mac I eat is home made, Panera Bread, Chick-Fil-A, Popeyes new one, Outback Steak House, S'Mac in New York.
Anyone try those, they won't regret it.