WOW! CRAZY! Home Made Processed American Cheese Recipe - Glen And Friends Cooking

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  • Опубликовано: 30 апр 2024
  • Home Made Processed American Cheese Recipe Just like a DIY Kraft cheese slice recipe, or a DIY Velveeta recipe - this American cheese recipe is the one you need to make melty cheese for your next cheeseburger or queso fundido recipe. Homemade velveeta for your cheeseburger!
    Ingredients:
    700g (25 ounces) cheddar cheese (or Colby, Monterey Jack, Wisconsin brick)
    300 mL (10 ounces) milk
    50g (3½ Tbsp) butter
    18g (3¼ tsp) sodium citrate
    1g (1/8 tsp) sodium hexametaphosphate (optional)
    Method:
    Shred the cheese.
    In a pot over medium heat, melt the butter into the milk.
    Add the sodium citrate and sodium hexametaphosphate, stir to dissolve and bring to 150ºF.
    Slowly mix in the shredded cheese and stir / whisk to a smooth constancy.
    Transfer to molds* while still hot.
    Store in the fridge.
    *Flexi silicone molds works best for this, though yogourt and sour cream containers are great too (though you may have to cut a yogourt container open to get the cheese out).
    SmokeHouse Burgers Reverse Sear SteakHouse Hamburgers: • Reverse Sear SmokeHous...
    J.L. Kraft is credited with the invention of what we now know as “American process Cheese” or just American Cheese.
    After leaving Canada and moving to Chicago to be a cheese wholesaler, Kraft had been working on the idea of pasteurised and canned cheese. This canning extended the shelf life of cheese and was something that had been long experimented with by European cheesemakers.
    Kraft then struck on the idea of pasteurisation and adding an emulsifier (sodium phosphate) - this process led to a cheese with along shelf life, consistent quality and flavour, and better melting qualities. It was patented in 1916 and was an instant success. All of this was also achieved using base cheese that was inferior and would have been considered waste just a few years earlier.
    0:00 Home Made Process American Cheese Recipe
    0:06 What is American Cheese / American processed cheese
    0:28 How was American processed cheese invented
    6:08 Tasting diy American processed cheese
    9:09 Recipe
    #LeGourmetTV #GlenAndFriendsCooking
    Glen & Friends Cooking,recipe,how to make cheese,how to make american cheese at home,how to make american cheese sauce,Home Made Process American Cheese Recipe,diy velveeta cheese,diy velveeta cheese sauce,how to make cheeseburger cheese,diy kraft cheese slices,homemade velveeta cheese,homemade velveeta cheese recipe,how to make american cheese,trisodium citrate cheese,sodium citrate,homemade velveeta,processed cheese how it's made,melty cheese,gavin webber
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Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @GlenAndFriendsCooking
    @GlenAndFriendsCooking  3 года назад +175

    Thanks for watching Everyone! *Let us know in the comments: What do you use 'American Cheese' for??* Full recipe in the description box.

    • @finalxcx
      @finalxcx 3 года назад +3

      Awesome! I love cheese and this looks easy enough to do! If you ever find farmers cheese near you, It is so good on a burger. It melts just as well as American. I'm lucky to live near the boarder to Wisconsin and have access to loads of great cheeses!

    • @stretch1151
      @stretch1151 3 года назад +10

      If you don't have a wire cheese cutter use dental floss(unscented).

    • @OptimusWombat
      @OptimusWombat 3 года назад +13

      Basic grilled cheeses and hamburgers. That's pretty much it.

    • @scottl6665
      @scottl6665 3 года назад +7

      I love all cheese. Even this stuff. It has its place and excels at it: cheeseburgers, grilled cheese, queso dip, etc.

    • @rosepearl7092
      @rosepearl7092 3 года назад +4

      Wow! When I requested Canadian food you really took it seriously! Thanks!
      And now to make CheezWiz from my favourite gorgonzola!

  • @EntropicCheese
    @EntropicCheese 3 года назад +1821

    The fact that sodium citrate makes great nacho cheese is INCREDIBLY suspicious given its chemical formula: Na₃C₆H₅O₇
    No, I am not kidding. That is real.

  • @michellesade1703
    @michellesade1703 3 года назад +133

    I'm an American, living in the EU and there have been times I miss this cheese so badly - I need a real grilled cheese sandwich!! I was thrilled seeing this video a few weeks ago. I immediately ordered sodium citrate. It got here yesterday. I grabbed the cheese from the market this morning, and not 5 minutes ago finished up making this recipe. OMG! I am seriously giddy! Thank you so very much. It is very simple to make and sets up quickly. My grilled cheese is on the menu for this evening ;)

    • @xander1052
      @xander1052 3 года назад +6

      We have these cheese slices in europe too lol (though I have never had them in a grilled cheese sandwich, British/Irish cheddar stretches good enough for me and the strength of flavour is fantastic)

    • @augustzeidman4443
      @augustzeidman4443 2 года назад +2

      I've found a similar product in Dutch supermarkets, but it's just not quite as good as good ol' Kraft Singles. I am honestly able to get those too, from an American market on a military base I can go to, but it's a 3-hour drive and not particularly worth it just for Kraft. Definitely gonna be making this at home in the next couple of days!

    • @Max-ss2gh
      @Max-ss2gh 2 года назад

      @@augustzeidman4443 Hey, I live in NL now too, have you found any other places to get kraft deli slices?

    • @augustzeidman4443
      @augustzeidman4443 2 года назад +1

      @@Max-ss2gh AH has some similar products, namely Country Cow cheese slices

    • @tristan4175
      @tristan4175 Год назад

      You can find those in all grocery stores in Sweden

  • @squidoo.
    @squidoo. 3 года назад +130

    “So, we’ll shred this cheese”
    *proceeds to descend the cheese into the deepest guts of hell at a speed neither light or sound itself cannot ever beat*

  • @jcwoods2311
    @jcwoods2311 3 года назад +232

    The Dental Floss that's likely sitting unused in most people's medicine cabinets work wonderfully for cutting processed cheeses. ( the nervous smile look of horror on Jules' face was priceless!!}

    • @EAKugler
      @EAKugler 3 года назад +47

      Just don't use the mint flavored one...ew

    • @stephenellams272
      @stephenellams272 3 года назад +13

      J Woods note to self.. don’t use the mint coated floss 😬

    • @JediOfTheRepublic
      @JediOfTheRepublic 3 года назад +14

      I ain’t wasting my Glide floss. That shit is expensive

    • @maranscandy9350
      @maranscandy9350 3 года назад +8

      Just be aware that many brands of floss contain PFAS and bisphenols/pthalates which get direct access to the bloodstream through the mouth. Biodegradable, unflavored floss without PFAS might be better.

    • @Beehashe
      @Beehashe 3 года назад +21

      Fishing line works fine!

  • @seshpenguin
    @seshpenguin 3 года назад +509

    I like your little bit on all foods are chemicals. Some people are scared of stuff like (say, MSG), because it has a scary chemical name, when in reality something like baking powder is really "sodium hydrogencarbonate", but with a friendly name.

    • @Rehevkor
      @Rehevkor 3 года назад +129

      Not to mention dihydrogen monoxide. That stuff is terrifying!

    • @janetmcg3086
      @janetmcg3086 3 года назад +6

      Rehevkor Shoot! That was exactly what I was going to say!

    • @waaahl
      @waaahl 3 года назад +9

      @@BigMacIIx That's not a real thing, though. I think you mean dihydrogen monoxide.

    • @CarbonatedTurtle
      @CarbonatedTurtle 3 года назад +28

      MSG is like a superhero of seasoning, and anyone who's scared of it is only hurting themselves.

    • @BigMacIIx
      @BigMacIIx 3 года назад +3

      @@waaahl My bad, they are all quarks and lepton to me...

  • @lauranixon1495
    @lauranixon1495 3 года назад +462

    I love you, Glen. From a chemist who has spent years rolling her eyes at the term "organic food"

    • @wemblyfez
      @wemblyfez 3 года назад +18

      Oh, Laura, I'd love to chat with you about "organic food." I bet you'd have some serious and intelligent insight. I'm all for getting the healthiest and lowest "processed" food (Glen's cheese video has been a wonderful education about processed foods, loved it) but I'm guessing you'd have some solid science behind it all, explaining what's "real" and true. Eye rolling included ;-)...

    • @SilvaDreams
      @SilvaDreams 3 года назад +57

      @@wemblyfez Well the irony is most organic foods are just organic in that they use "organic" fertilizers and "organic" pesticides which the only regulation to claim something organic is to have a natural base.... Well many fertilizers and pesticides we use now days fit that. The base of them might have started natural but were chemically altered. So your organic food likely uses the same stuff to fertilize and keep bugs off them as the non-organic foods.

    • @TheVGMajor
      @TheVGMajor 3 года назад +41

      Couldn't agree more. I've always know organic is essentially a marketing ploy.

    • @lauranixon1495
      @lauranixon1495 3 года назад +38

      @@TheVGMajor It's just a stupid term. Your food is always organic in the sense that it is made up primarily of molecules that are carbon based.

    • @__seeker__
      @__seeker__ 3 года назад +31

      My favorite one I’ve seen in the store was “Organic Salt.” 🤦🏼‍♂️

  • @Nafregamisrocanob
    @Nafregamisrocanob 3 года назад +53

    True story. We were camping in Quebec back in the early 70’s and needed some provisions so we stop at a grocery store on the way to Mt Tremblant. Looking around the store we couldn’t find “American Cheese” so we asked a manager who looked at us like we were crazy when we said we couldn’t find it- he laughed at us and said they call it Canadian Cheese!

    • @crazyrobots6565
      @crazyrobots6565 3 года назад +9

      Very few people here do, at least nowadays. To be fair, it was (as Glen explained in this video) that it was invented by a Canadian living in the US.

    • @gardengatesopen
      @gardengatesopen 3 года назад

      I love a good cheese story😬
      ❤🧀❤🧀❤🧀❤🧀❤🧀❤

  • @Khristafer
    @Khristafer 3 года назад +293

    The fact that American cheese was invented by a Canadian, while surprising, is like, the most American thing.

    • @theobnoxiousgamer9624
      @theobnoxiousgamer9624 3 года назад +39

      I mean, Canada is also America.... Mexico is as well. Lol.

    • @aredpander
      @aredpander 3 года назад +12

      Still American cheese

    • @mkbarber65
      @mkbarber65 3 года назад +25

      The Obnoxious Gamer uhhh no, as a Canadian, I am NOT an American

    • @peteowe
      @peteowe 3 года назад +13

      American cheese was never invented by a Canadian. American cheese is simply a term used since colonial times to distinguish between the Cheddar made in England VS that made in America. Tax and import controls in Great Britain necessitated the distinction.

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 3 года назад +20

      whats more American then moving to America to build an empire based on taking stuff no one else was willing to sell, processing the hell out of it using Science and Chemicals, rebranding it, and then selling it to the masses?

  • @phillipmiller8560
    @phillipmiller8560 3 года назад +74

    Jules has the best job ever.

  • @sabrinac.5916
    @sabrinac.5916 3 года назад +31

    This made my day. Jules' reaction just lit me up. Thanks for the smile.

  • @13pitchblackangel
    @13pitchblackangel 3 года назад +18

    "Everything you eat is a chemical" Glen, I love you truly.

    • @fitzhugh7463
      @fitzhugh7463 3 года назад

      @@cbirdman its found in almonds and apple seeds.

  • @ybe7011
    @ybe7011 3 года назад +82

    Basically this is a cheese that needs a vehicle. I agree, grilled cheese and mac-n-cheese are the best with this type of cheese! Nacho dip too!

    • @michaelbrust8597
      @michaelbrust8597 3 года назад +9

      A spoon is a vehicle, my fingers are also a vehicle... :-P

    • @Elric509
      @Elric509 3 года назад +4

      @@michaelbrust8597 the plate you put it on is a vehicle

    • @wright96d
      @wright96d 3 года назад +4

      To be fair, I can't really see a point in using this for Mac and cheese. Just shred the cheese you want in the mac, and add the sodium citrate before adding the cheese. This is really just for grilled cheese and burgers in my eyes.

    • @FizzyCape
      @FizzyCape 3 года назад

      wright96d yup. Absolutely zero benefit of making this stuff for use in queso dip and Mac and cheese. It’s just extra work. I sprinkle some in with the shredded cheese while making Mac and cheese and ive never had any issues.

  • @TWFydGlu
    @TWFydGlu 3 года назад +83

    I would consider infusing the milk. Peppercorns, herbs, garlic.

    • @riccardobianco2659
      @riccardobianco2659 3 года назад +14

      Martin Nilsson and maybe browning a little the butter to add a nutty flavour

    • @sylvnfox
      @sylvnfox 3 года назад +3

      also you can mix cheeses, cheddar and jack and colby

  • @j5300
    @j5300 3 года назад +48

    If you don't have a cheese wire you can use dental floss.
    Also there's really nothing objectionable about this; calling it "processed cheese" makes it sound really unappealing, but it's just cheese with added milk and butter. It's basically solid cheese sauce.

    • @troubleboy
      @troubleboy 3 года назад +4

      Cheese after all is just processed milk.

    • @ertonyrn
      @ertonyrn 3 года назад +1

      The salts ate way more important than butter and milk. You didnt pay attention

    • @j5300
      @j5300 3 года назад

      @@ertonyrn the salt is only there to hold the rest of the ingredients together. That's like saying mortar is the most important part of a brick wall.

    • @BYToady
      @BYToady 3 года назад +2

      @@j5300 Well, mortar is the difference between a wall and a pile!

    • @joelsmith3473
      @joelsmith3473 3 года назад

      "Processed cheese" may sound unappealing, but the cheese industry tried lobbying Congress to pass legislation forcing processed cheese to be labelled "embalmed cheese"

  • @pedantic79
    @pedantic79 3 года назад +25

    I've made this before with 2 year old Black Diamond Cheddar. It was amazing. You do lose the crystals, but I've seen people try to melt aged cheddar and just end up with an oil slick. This lets you get that amazing sharp flavor and melty texture that you actually want. So should you break your bank with your cheese choice? Probably not, but choose a great tasting cheese.

  • @troyboy7610
    @troyboy7610 2 года назад +7

    I love it when Glen tries something that he really likes and seeing it hard for him to contain the joy as he's smiling while talking. The cheese looked really good!

  • @breakfastboy89
    @breakfastboy89 3 года назад +5

    This is a classic video in the making. Love seeing your joy when tasting the cheese, and the explanation about how it's not too different from "normal" cheeses - the method to make it is just slightly different.

  • @Munden
    @Munden 3 года назад +8

    I finally made this! The habanero block cheese I used to buy was discontinued a few years ago. This year I grew some ultra hot peppers. I combined a block of aged cheddar and 1/2 block of pepper jack cheese with 1/2 a pepper - now I have the hottest cheese I've ever had and I'm loving it.

  • @TybudX
    @TybudX 3 года назад +28

    So it's really a variation of a béchamel sauce, with sodium citrate doing double duty for salt and a binding agent for the cheese and milk, and sodium hexametaphosphate acting as the flour to thicken things up. Pretty ingenious.

    • @bay0r
      @bay0r 3 года назад +2

      its so awful

    • @sameash3153
      @sameash3153 3 года назад

      Wait, I can just freeze a cheese sauce?

  • @SuperLQQK
    @SuperLQQK 3 года назад +76

    lol..what!?! I guess it's good to know the how and why of processed cheese food. I always assumed it was way more processed then it really is, like some sort of alchemy of ingredients that resulted in something like cheese. Turns out it is only modified cheese. If I had not been watching G&F I may have never known.

    • @altheamcnabb2829
      @altheamcnabb2829 3 года назад +9

      yep easy like mozzarella. had no clue.

    • @NonsensicalSpudz
      @NonsensicalSpudz 3 года назад +7

      welll. this isn't made in a factory, plastic cheese is still cheese product and not classified as cheese

    • @JediOfTheRepublic
      @JediOfTheRepublic 3 года назад +5

      The stuff you get in the store is a bit more processed but I too thought that.

    • @haiti222
      @haiti222 3 года назад +11

      Yeah, I think in the US, this is pasteurized process American Cheese, not cheese food. Cheese food also has added vegetable oil and stuff. Also, the naming process has changed as to what is allowed on packages. Sargento takes down cheese food here: www.sargento.com/real-life/natural-cheese-vs-processed

    • @Boyetto-san
      @Boyetto-san 3 года назад +9

      There are actually several regulatory classifications for processed cheese in the US. Some have more additives and filler than others. The original processed cheese made by Kraft and also used to make the first Cheese Whiz was actually modified later on to cut costs and by all accounts doesn't taste anymore like the original.

  • @JediOfTheRepublic
    @JediOfTheRepublic 3 года назад +27

    Im definitely making this. I love Velveta, so being able to make a homemade version is going be nice. I like actual cheese but this stuff brings back childhood memories.

    • @vine00
      @vine00 2 года назад

      Correct me if I'm wrong but I don't think Velveeta is American cheese. Both melt excellently, but are two entirely different things taste wise.

    • @lugoorstar
      @lugoorstar Год назад

      @@vine00 originally it was made (and can still be made obviously) by mixing different amounts of cheeses and an emulsifier, now it’s usually made with pasteurized milk, whey (the protein rich liquid that’s left after making cheese), an emulsifier, and salt.
      Now it’s better to make it in the second process because instead of melting fully usable cheese, you use a cheese byproduct and milk, reducing waste and no need to use your precious cheese.

  • @alexandercrews1194
    @alexandercrews1194 3 года назад +71

    If you replace the yellow cheddar with equal parts white cheddar, provolone, and swiss, and add liquid smoke, you will have a regional type of processed cheese from St. Louis called Provel. We love to put it on our pizza here, where we pair it with an unleavened crust and a sweet sauce. It's actually really good!

    • @RexTenomous
      @RexTenomous 3 года назад +4

      My aunt just straight uses that stuff in place of anything that you would use shredded cheese for. Mac and cheese, grilled cheese, pasta for some reason...

    • @Rose-jz6sx
      @Rose-jz6sx 3 года назад +1

      Oh daaaamn

    • @yabbadabbindude
      @yabbadabbindude 3 года назад +1

      Interesting

    • @MercurialIris
      @MercurialIris 3 года назад

      Is that why Wisconsin is fat?

    • @alexandercrews1194
      @alexandercrews1194 3 года назад +3

      @@MercurialIris In general, in the midwest we eat like shit. Lots of carbs, dairy, and red meat.

  • @a5cent
    @a5cent 3 года назад +1

    I love the chemistry here! Super interesting and helps us understand what is really going on in our food. Thank you!

  • @fefelarue2948
    @fefelarue2948 3 года назад +25

    I haven’t eaten processed cheese in decades. But this I would make.

    • @rydaler
      @rydaler 3 года назад +4

      Processed cheese is in a lot of restaurants, any fast food or most burger places, any ballpark nachos. So if you eat out on a consistent basis it would be hard to avoid it.

    • @utcgangstaa
      @utcgangstaa 3 года назад +2

      @@rydaler Over here in the Netherlands it's extremely rare to see processed cheese. In a general supermarket you would typically find atleast 20 different types of cheese. These generally range from what in the USA would be called Gouda (although we don't call it Gouda here, Gouda is just a brand but not a type here, it's typically referred to how long it has aged), and stuff ranging from parmigiano-reggiano to fresh mozzarella (the one that comes in a ball that's inside a pouch of water, you'd be hard pressed to find grated mozzarella here). A lot of stores don't carry processed cheese, especially dedicated cheese stores. As for general supermarkets they useally only carry 1 processed cheese and if you go to a smaller location they probably won't have any at all.

  • @brianhunt6943
    @brianhunt6943 3 года назад +36

    That big sigh before you had to explain refined chemicals :) love it. I totally want to experiment making a pepper jack version of american cheese now!

    • @zxb995511
      @zxb995511 3 года назад +7

      Glen always sighs before going into a rant or delving into a "controversial" topic that he knows will get lost of comments refuting whatever his view is.

    • @SharonH11100
      @SharonH11100 3 года назад

      Yes, I want to try a pepper-jack grilled cheese sandwich. What else would you suggest putting on it? Some type of mustard, maybe?

    • @bcostin
      @bcostin 3 года назад +2

      Cooper makes a black pepper variation of their American cheese that's really good.

    • @lisamoore6804
      @lisamoore6804 3 года назад

      Ikr! Me too. lol

    • @travisadams4470
      @travisadams4470 3 года назад

      That sounds awesome!

  • @icullumber
    @icullumber 3 года назад +7

    Thanks for this recipe Glen! I was quite disappointed with my first try on this. After cooling the cooked mixture it just didn't solidify like it did for you in the video. Upon examination of the recipe I realized that instead of 300ml of milk I used 500ml. However, not wanting to waste what I had already made, I found that the addition of some chopped jalepeno pepper, paprika, onion powder, and garlic powder turned what should have been a failure into a super silky nacho cheese sauce. Win.

  • @juliopcrj
    @juliopcrj 3 года назад +6

    "Everything you eat is a chemical"
    THANK YOU.

  • @budbear2234
    @budbear2234 3 года назад +14

    I LOVE how excited Glen is about this. American cheese is kind of underrated in a weird way? It’s my favorite on eggs and burgers and Mac n cheese I love how easily it melts and it reminds me of when I was a kid. Like you said, nothing is as good for a grilled cheese with American cheese and butter and nothing else.

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass 3 года назад +1

      Like he said it's good for what it's used for. It is good.

    • @riproar11
      @riproar11 3 года назад +1

      Swiss cheese melts well and is used for fondue. A buttered, toasted Swiss fondue sandwich beats a processed grilled cheese sandwich every time.

    • @Default78334
      @Default78334 3 года назад

      Try "buttering" your grilled cheese with mayonnaise some time...

    • @mjz9022
      @mjz9022 3 года назад +1

      Cheese omelettes are best with American Cheese, I'm saying it

    • @El_Jefe_Maestro
      @El_Jefe_Maestro 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@riproar11you realize all cheese is "processed" right? Smug bellend...

  • @exturkconner
    @exturkconner 3 года назад +18

    I've always thought its funny how people sing the praises of milk chocolate which is just chocolate filled out with milk oil and sugar. But when they fill out cheddar cheese with oil and milk people call it the worst food stuff ever created.

    • @mikeynjs94
      @mikeynjs94 3 года назад +3

      omg. absolutely. or thinning out coffee with milk/cream, sugar, & oils (artificial creamers)

    • @mikeynjs94
      @mikeynjs94 3 года назад

      @@Mutiny960 you laugh but what do you think instant is??

  • @CaptnAllIn
    @CaptnAllIn 3 года назад

    Love it!!!! Thanks for posting it!!!!

  • @chriscalon8913
    @chriscalon8913 3 года назад +1

    Although I would never make it, I am facinated by it and look forward to you using it. I love the history lesson as well!

  • @2XcrazymanX2
    @2XcrazymanX2 3 года назад +4

    Glen looks so happy with this haha I love it.

  • @armadillerff
    @armadillerff 3 года назад +4

    The look on Jules’ face as you’re trying to sell her on the processed cheese is the look of true love.

  • @soknightsam
    @soknightsam 3 года назад +1

    Unexpected video topic but great! Thanks Glen! American here, long time subscriber and raised on the stuff. It's got a place in my heart and arteries. Stay safe my favorite Canadians

  • @nikahopper2178
    @nikahopper2178 Год назад

    Love this! My grandfather was a microbiologist who loved all things dairy and love American canned cheese.

  • @1p6t1gms
    @1p6t1gms 3 года назад +8

    Eggs Benedict, made traditionally with Canadian bacon and an egg, except with this American cheese instead of the Hollandaise sauce as a time issue thingy or an egg McMuffin essentially, I love'em.

  • @TheBrewjo
    @TheBrewjo 3 года назад +18

    As someone on a low carb diet, I'll give this a shot. Might be a great way to make wraps for lunch and other meals by 'casting' sheets of cheese. Also as a burger slice, I'm guessing we could add things like smoke flavor or herb/spice mixes... what could go wrong :)

    • @mackenziedrake
      @mackenziedrake 3 года назад +2

      You eat so much of it that you manage to gain weight eating it? *G* I've been on that type of diet. All the best to you!

    • @zsigmondkara
      @zsigmondkara 3 года назад +1

      Tried it, got an epic constipation. Just a small warning ;)

    • @scottjenkins4613
      @scottjenkins4613 3 года назад +1

      Some proccessed cheese may contain modified food starch which will actually add carbs to cheese that it would not normally contain. The best low carb cheese is natural cheese which is nearly 0% carbs.

    • @deanwinchester7179
      @deanwinchester7179 3 года назад

      If you get the "fancier" Kraft slices they are like 1 gram instead of 2 grams for the regular slices they sell.

  • @justinrowan594
    @justinrowan594 3 года назад

    This kind of content is why I try to never miss a video. You're not afraid of experimentation and to go against the grain of "normal" food-related content on the web.

  • @Whipster-Old
    @Whipster-Old 3 года назад

    Incredible! Thanks so much.

  • @cuddlepuppy69
    @cuddlepuppy69 3 года назад +18

    american cheese has its place and that place is on smashburgers and in my mouth straight from the fridge at 2am

    • @SilverSnark
      @SilverSnark 3 года назад

      'in my mouth straight from the fridge at 2am' 0_0 is this me?!

    • @cuddlepuppy69
      @cuddlepuppy69 3 года назад +1

      Silver Bronze no i wrote that comment actually

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez 3 года назад

      I think the main uses for American cheese in the USA is for cheeseburgers, Mac and cheese and grilled cheese.

  • @cv6659
    @cv6659 3 года назад +4

    Glen, Julie, I love you guys. You're one of only two cooking channels I religiously follow.
    Also, thanks, Glen, for this. I'm not afraid of chemicals in food. It is what it is. But cooking with things with more than four syllables has always freaked me out. I lacked the courage to explore that realm of ingredients, I didn't even trust myself with baking.
    Thanks to you, that's changing.
    I really, sincerely, am going to play with this recipe because I have two guiltier pleasures than American cheese:
    Velveeta.
    Easy Cheese.
    These are all related, obviously. I like Velveeta for casseroles. Easy cheese, however is something I hide when guests come over. My dad ate it all the time. I remember summer nights listening to baseball games on the radio and watching him with that can of cheese, a box of Ritz and a jar of whatever pickled vegetables he could get his hands on.
    I then took canned cheese to college, but was teased for acting like a "guy." Apparently, only men eat Easy Cheese. Who knew?
    Anyhow, it's getting harder and harder to find. I can't even find its jarred cousin, Cheeze Whiz, anywhere!! So, yeah, I need to make it myself.
    All that to say, don't listen to Julie in this case. :) You've got friends on this one, Glen. Thanks again.

    • @ratgr
      @ratgr 3 года назад

      Almost all of your less than four syllable ingredients can be called by their chemical names, baking soda -> sodium bicarbonate, water -> dihydrogen oxide, we just don't have "normal" names for things that are not that common on kitchens anymore, so they are called by their chemical names, there are also those that could mean different things on different places, the chemical name makes sure you get what you asked for.

  • @cdtimmin
    @cdtimmin Год назад

    This is SO easy! I’m amazed. I need to get all the ingredients but wow!

  • @cbdsw
    @cbdsw 3 года назад

    I love this!! I am going to make some for all my burgers and Salsa con Queso.!

  • @marilyn1228
    @marilyn1228 3 года назад +12

    As usual, you two are the start of a great day! I've noticed those pre-made cheese slices are getting thinner and thinner, so I'm happy to try this. How do you suggest storing it for longer periods of time, please and thank you!

    • @ybe7011
      @ybe7011 3 года назад +6

      Yes! They are, it's as if they are painted on the plastic wrapper!

    • @ybe7011
      @ybe7011 3 года назад +2

      @Scott Halloween the old saying "he pinches a nickel so hard he makes the buffalo fart" comes to mind here. 😂

  • @flopilop3808
    @flopilop3808 3 года назад +17

    Nice, our version of processed cheese in Czech Republic has more emulsifying salts to make it onto a spread when cold that we put on rye bread, its pretty good.
    Edit: most common emulsifying salts in them are E452, E331, E450, E339

    • @lukepaping
      @lukepaping 3 года назад +1

      331 is sodium citrate, not sure about the rest but they're easy enough to look up

    • @JackPorter
      @JackPorter 3 года назад +5

      E542 Edible bone phosphate.
      E450 Potassium and sodium di-phosphates.
      E339 Sodium phosphates.
      Sodium phosphate is such a broad category though, it's most likely Trisodium phosphate

    • @DavidCollinsRivera
      @DavidCollinsRivera 3 года назад +1

      Kraft and other brands do make a spreadable version of this. They used to sell it in jars. Spray cheese is likely a very loose version as well.

  • @nicolehollenbach4772
    @nicolehollenbach4772 3 года назад

    you are a rock star for providing the metric measurements. thank you!

  • @abiquamediaco
    @abiquamediaco 5 месяцев назад

    So glad I found this channel again. I used to watch your episodes all the time!❤

  • @MrLukeChandler
    @MrLukeChandler 3 года назад +5

    Excited to watch! Maybe you can use that cheese in some New Zealand Cheese Rolls though :)

  • @JoeyRanieri12
    @JoeyRanieri12 3 года назад +3

    Does it last the same as store bought or do they add additives to keep it lasting longer.

  • @matthewl996
    @matthewl996 3 года назад

    Jules enthusiasm at trying this made my day!

  • @ICookAndPaint
    @ICookAndPaint 3 года назад +2

    Hi Glen! I love how you go through the anthropology of the foods you make. I did an American cheese on my channel, only I used gelatine. I love your content, keep it coming. Cheers from London, Ontario! 🙌🙌

  • @UndeadPasta
    @UndeadPasta 3 года назад +7

    I actually had no idea how processed cheese was made. I have a lot more respect for it now

    • @BernieTime1
      @BernieTime1 3 года назад +1

      His method is a much better "real" version than what we get in the stores. Look to the post by Scott Jenkins in the comments about his experience working on the commercial product.

    • @FizzyCape
      @FizzyCape 3 года назад +1

      Processed cheese in the grocery store is gonna have a lot more preservatives and fillers and stuff than homemade stuff, if that matters to you

  • @mohdfazilkhan4251
    @mohdfazilkhan4251 3 года назад +45

    Waiting for Red bull energy drink clone

    • @Asak999
      @Asak999 3 года назад +1

      or monster, i know it's bad, but dear lord i love the taste of it.

    • @Rose.Of.Hizaki
      @Rose.Of.Hizaki 3 года назад +1

      Theres actually a really interesting video on youtube where a guy loves the taste of redbull so much that he wanted to drink it at night so spent a few days trying to take the caffeine out of it (His own version of redbull pretty much) Theres like a whole science behind redbull with all the flavorings, additives and whatever things they use so it might not be _'as easy'_ or _'simple'_ as Glen's KFC videos where he went through and taste tested so many different recipes.
      The channel is called 'NileRed' and the video is called 'Taking the caffeine out of RedBull so I can drink it at night' Really really interesting video

    • @altheamcnabb2829
      @altheamcnabb2829 3 года назад

      Or the new BANG'S. 300 mg of caffeine. God the flavors and no carbs. 3$ a pop gets expensive real fast.

  • @dawnconner6123
    @dawnconner6123 9 месяцев назад +1

    when i was a young single mother i recieved the food from the government we called it 'commodities'. the brick 'american' cheese they gave out was SO freaking delicious. it was way harder than any other american wed ever had. i couldnt eat american cheese for decades after having too much of the kraft type stuff. that commodity cheese was just way better. anyone else remember the commodity food?

  • @evelyngrammar
    @evelyngrammar 3 года назад

    Such a fun idea!

  • @user-eb4vs6si1n
    @user-eb4vs6si1n 3 года назад +7

    My local supermarket deli counter has an Italian blend American cheese. It's parmesan, Romano, Asiago and provolone. It's made by the brand land O lakes. It still slices and melts like processed American cheese and has a great flavor that really cuts through the busyness of a burger. I'd really like to see you make that work for a home cooking setup with all of those hard, aged, "crumbly" cheeses.

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass 3 года назад

      My dad would always get the deli style American cheese. Its good stuff.

  • @Brynn_Wood
    @Brynn_Wood 3 года назад +26

    Glen: "everything is a chemical"
    Yes!

    • @SilvaDreams
      @SilvaDreams 3 года назад +6

      Had one lady that always went on and on about all the chemicals in food and always got her "organic non-GMO, super food (blah, blah, blah)" drink and cookie... SO one day I broke the entire drink and cookie down to it's chemical nature and started off as normal with "So just your normal...." and instead of the name of the drink and cookie I rattled off the entire string of chemical names for everything that made them up.
      I nearly cracked up midway through because her eyes just kept getting bigger and bigger. Of course I had to end it with "Oh sorry I mean your drink and cookie."
      She just sputtered a few times and look absolutely disgusted with them, put them down with a mutter of "Oh god" and left.

    • @bay0r
      @bay0r 3 года назад

      @@SilvaDreams uhh you must be very smart

  • @boblalonde6879
    @boblalonde6879 3 года назад

    I laughed through most of this video. Great content.
    Some of the facial expressions from both of you were priceless.

  • @johnhmstr
    @johnhmstr 3 года назад

    This is the OG American cheese that all american cheese wishes it was.
    i am totally making this with left over cheese cast off and trim I accumulate in my freezer!
    Really appreciate this episode in every way. From the revulsion to "processed cheese food"; to the history of why it came about, to the monologue about "Chemicals". Love it!
    This is food science amalgamated into a uniform block for every day practical consumption. Useful and delicious! ;-)

  • @benfsinger
    @benfsinger 3 года назад +32

    I'm curious what happened to your original molds. Noticed a totally different shape in the final products! 😂

    • @GlenAndFriendsCooking
      @GlenAndFriendsCooking  3 года назад +57

      I made a pile of it that day for future recipe videos - I decided the 'round' looked better n camera for just slicing. The squares will show up in future videos.

    • @benfsinger
      @benfsinger 3 года назад +1

      @@GlenAndFriendsCooking Figures. Makes more sense to do a lot more than you show us on camera, given the work involved in a batch of pretty much anything you do!

  • @Abbot3663
    @Abbot3663 3 года назад +16

    Kraft: *has capitalised on cheese for generations*. Glen: I’m boutta end this mans whole career

    • @okanekami9986
      @okanekami9986 3 года назад +1

      ranger1986ka you don’t have much else better to do with your time than to be an insufferable fuck to strangers? that’s really sad

    • @Adam-cq1ez
      @Adam-cq1ez 3 года назад +2

      ranger1986ka ok Kraft

    • @roxy8392
      @roxy8392 3 года назад

      ranger1986ka here comes the kraft slices fucker

    • @seanmcdaniel8019
      @seanmcdaniel8019 3 года назад

      ranger1986ka “I highly doubt that.” R/wooooooooooosh

  • @sidlewis757
    @sidlewis757 3 года назад

    Lovely!

  • @bobs3516
    @bobs3516 Год назад

    Thank you for your work.

  • @scottsmith4346
    @scottsmith4346 3 года назад +12

    I mean, "natural cheese" is made through a chemical process as well. Cheddar doesn't just occur in nature as a whole food.

    • @jaqssmith1666
      @jaqssmith1666 3 года назад

      so what's the fruit that comes off my cheddar tree?

    • @WhiteRaven___
      @WhiteRaven___ 3 года назад +1

      @@jaqssmith1666 that would be the cow utter tree

  • @GrizzAxxemann
    @GrizzAxxemann 3 года назад +6

    My dad would always say "If they have to say it's food on the package, you shouldn't be eating it."
    Sorry Pop, but nothing tastes better in a grilled cheese or on a smashburger. Any other time, you're right.

  • @thecalicoheart7946
    @thecalicoheart7946 3 года назад

    I love that this really pleased you! So sweet! 😊 It’s the little things in life, isn’t it?! 😁👍

  • @michaelorfanos7416
    @michaelorfanos7416 3 года назад

    Love it!

  • @adamjchafe
    @adamjchafe 3 года назад +6

    Love it! Could you put your own add ins as well? Chili peppers, spices, etc?
    Also do you have further instructions on making the sodium citrate?
    Best use for this has got to be a really nice grilled cheese on homemade bread.

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass 3 года назад

      Spices and roasted chiles would be nice. Why not? You are the Bee's Knees of your own Processed Cheese. -- Chef John 2020

    • @agent4nderson
      @agent4nderson 3 года назад

      I just made a batched with fresh jalapenos in. I'll let you know how it comes out. I'm already regretting not blanching the jalapeno first, but we'll see!

  • @patsygorveatte3914
    @patsygorveatte3914 3 года назад +3

    I'm thrilled you did this video. Ive always wondered about american cheese because people mock me for eating it saying it's one molecule away from plastic. Keep bringing us these types of videos that help solve a mystery and settle an argument! Thanks

  • @bricansa
    @bricansa 3 года назад

    Found your channel today, what a gem. Thank you!

  • @mackenziedrake
    @mackenziedrake 3 года назад +1

    Kraft used to make a Bacon jar cheese that in my long-vanished youth contained real bacon. The smokiness was subtle, and the mouthfeel of the scattered bits of lean ground bacon and little bursts of salty meatiness fascinated me as a kid. The recipe changed over time, of course, but I think I will have a go at making it at home with some bacon ends for that 'real' reclaimed food experience. Many thanks for the memory and inspiration!

    • @WhoDunnit346
      @WhoDunnit346 8 месяцев назад

      Me too! Only mine was the green olive/pimento cheese spread. Old English or something like that. It's been 3 years, but did you ever make the bacon cheese spread?

  • @NightfallGemini
    @NightfallGemini 3 года назад +6

    So basically, 'processed cheese' came about as a food preservation technique (albeit for profit). Interesting stuff.

  • @bigjoemann
    @bigjoemann 3 года назад +85

    It's called American Cheese because we were the only ones that would claim it as a cheese.

    • @RealityIsTheNow
      @RealityIsTheNow 3 года назад +4

      Its a misunderstood food, and foreigners are quite ignorant about it. It was designed for a specific purpose. It's not a replacement for other sorts of cheese.

    • @robtk3
      @robtk3 3 года назад +5

      And yet, invented by a Canadian.

    • @porscheaircooled
      @porscheaircooled 3 года назад

      It sounds like it exists only because it’s incredibly profitable lol. Reminds me of ketchup, low grade tomatoes mixed with some cheap ingredients to make a sauce which isn’t bad but isn’t great.

    • @davyddocarmocabral2989
      @davyddocarmocabral2989 3 года назад +2

      @@porscheaircooled Ketchup is tomatoes, vinegar and sugar. And it was invented to eat meat that isn't that fresh

    • @numetalinkin
      @numetalinkin 3 года назад

      @Toxic Potato okay. Worst cheese, Still.

  • @hungrymichigander
    @hungrymichigander 3 года назад

    I ate cheese slices like that as a kid. Loved it.

  • @beadladee
    @beadladee 3 года назад +1

    That was easy! Who knew! Awesome!

  • @TheDigitalAura
    @TheDigitalAura 3 года назад +13

    Perfect cheese for banana and sushi pizza.

  • @brianhalberg6562
    @brianhalberg6562 3 года назад +8

    I clicked on this video for one reason.....to get the answer to WHY?
    Why, in this day and age, when you can purchase a thousand different, beautiful, tasty cheeses, would you want to eat "processed cheese food"?
    I'm going straight to my fridge to tell my Gorgonzola, Havarti and Jarlsberg how much I love them.

    • @bobbiusshadow6985
      @bobbiusshadow6985 3 года назад +2

      .. and then, turn them "American"?

    • @SirWussiePants
      @SirWussiePants 3 года назад +2

      Like anything else, American Cheese has a purpose. It melts extremely well. I love a block of aged cheddar but it has no place on a burger. The same with American cheese which has no place on a cracker.

    • @magnesjberg24
      @magnesjberg24 3 года назад +1

      @Larry Roux
      Great comment. All cheese is great, in their own way. Like You'd never use blue cheese in a Mac & cheese dish. Unless you're a weirdo.

    • @liger04
      @liger04 3 года назад

      If you love your Jarlsberg, you won't make it suffer the indignity of being melted onto cheap ground hamburger for some kid's birthday party where nobody will even notice it's not bargain brand Swiss.
      American cheese does not suffer. It is already dead. Do with it as you wish.

  • @jakeamymusic
    @jakeamymusic 3 года назад

    So cool!

  • @howdyyall6096
    @howdyyall6096 3 года назад

    I learned something, thank you. I had thought American cheese was a blend of cheddar and cream cheeses, so thanks for the info. Love your show.

  • @markiangooley
    @markiangooley 3 года назад +4

    Wow, that optional ingredient is Calgon! Which isn’t an ingredient in anything branded as Calgon any more.
    When I was a boy I was visiting Canada with my Dad and one of the Kraft Cheese brands was a spread in a small chub, sold as American cheese in the US but as Canadian cheese there...

    • @PhinClio
      @PhinClio 3 года назад +1

      "Ancient Chinese secret, huh?"

  • @davidtaylar8870
    @davidtaylar8870 3 года назад +4

    This cheese is exactly like adding non buttermilk pancake mix to eggs like restaurants do (in my mind). It stretches a little decent cheese out to a lot more less decent cheese.
    Also the bit about chemicals is spot on. Plus if someone is THAT scared of chemicals maybe they shouldn't be looking for process/processed cheese to begin with. It's not highly regarded for its health benefits. You get what you sign up for and in this case it's great grilled cheese or Spam cheese toast like my family does!

  • @WindozeFree
    @WindozeFree Год назад

    UNBELIEVEABLE, and thank you. I will no longer beat myself up for eating American cheese.

  • @Jholmberghawaii
    @Jholmberghawaii 3 года назад +1

    Homemade Velveeta. You’re amazing! 🌸

  • @jackadams1385
    @jackadams1385 3 года назад +7

    me and my family call it plastic cheese :) but it's always beautiful on a burger

  • @BenevolentChum
    @BenevolentChum 3 года назад +56

    I repent all my knee-jerk anti-American comments about this culinary monstrosity. Who knew a Canadian was responsible-- Jim from Nova Scotia.

    • @REALMWS
      @REALMWS 3 года назад +6

      Smart Canadian that took advantage of Americans terrible taste in food

    • @dreamwolf7302
      @dreamwolf7302 3 года назад +3

      Well you know, the fact people always said it isnt cheese...is also now bunk, because its made from real cheese....its just pasteurized and mixed so it melts better...
      the reason it tastes funny when you eat cold and solid, is because its really meant for making cheese sauces and such.

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 3 года назад

      Yes but Kraft was willing to relocate to America to build an empire based on taking stuff no one else was willing to sell, processing the hell out of it using Science and Chemicals, rebranding it, and then selling it to the masses and what's more American then that?

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez 3 года назад

      @@REALMWS American cheeseburgers are all over Canada and the world now, American food is delicious.

    • @gardengatesopen
      @gardengatesopen 3 года назад +1

      Jim Gerri- Gotcha!

  • @LadyLenaki
    @LadyLenaki 3 года назад

    This is really cool. I didn't really know what the process for making American cheese was, and now I do. Fun video.

  • @IsraelLutzMusic
    @IsraelLutzMusic 3 года назад +1

    Awesome!

  • @justaguylou
    @justaguylou 3 года назад +12

    This might make me a hick, but I sort of like the "can" cheese where you bend the tip & it squirts out, usually on a Ritz cracker

    • @JackPorter
      @JackPorter 3 года назад +2

      EasyCheeze I think is the name, I've never had cheese imitation product (as is its legal name in EU).
      It seems to be a strictly English speaking country thing.

    • @brissygirl4997
      @brissygirl4997 3 года назад +1

      @@JackPorter We don't have canned cheese here in Australia either.

    • @joantrotter3005
      @joantrotter3005 3 года назад +1

      Try it on graham crackers.

    • @rachel4483
      @rachel4483 3 года назад +4

      According to my husband and his dad, Pennsylvania natives, Philly cheese steaks are only legit if made with cheese whiz. I don't think you're a hick.

    • @cougarhunter33
      @cougarhunter33 3 года назад +6

      That's a mouth applicator.
      You stick it in your mouth and give the can a crank.

  • @KingPhoey
    @KingPhoey 3 года назад +6

    4:37 That’s why my homemade shredded cheese sticks together and the store bought doesn’t!? Chemicals man. Chemicals.

    • @karynnelson1497
      @karynnelson1497 3 года назад +3

      Lidia Bastianich sprinkles some grated parm into her shredded cheese so it doesn't clump.

    • @sneg__
      @sneg__ 3 года назад +7

      Actually, most of the time, it's just starch.

    • @KingPhoey
      @KingPhoey 3 года назад

      Scott Halloween 😮

    • @Rose-jz6sx
      @Rose-jz6sx 3 года назад +1

      Yeah they use corn or potato starch usually

  • @GregoryHaddock
    @GregoryHaddock Год назад

    Thank You for making this Video. I have always loved American Cheese but always wondered if I was eating something terrible. Now I feel much better.

  • @philipscottjackman3835
    @philipscottjackman3835 3 года назад

    looks great

  • @dubbreak
    @dubbreak 3 года назад +4

    One other benefit: no sugar or corn syrup. Last time I checked the pre-sliced processed cheese food had some form of sweetener and I can taste it (probably to make up for the lack of flavour).

  • @garyv2498
    @garyv2498 3 года назад +7

    Thanks for the story behind what is "American cheese".... all this time I've been thinking it's just hydrogenated vegetable oil or something not even close to actual cheese. Glad to know that's not true.

    • @The411
      @The411 3 года назад +2

      Glen's referring to the historical ingredients. The modern day Kraft stuff is axle grease.

  • @IndianaDave4661
    @IndianaDave4661 3 года назад

    Pretty cool. I'm going to try this. Thanks

  • @carychiasson9834
    @carychiasson9834 3 года назад +2

    I laughed so much when Glen's wife walked in and looked at it, the reaction made me laugh so much.

  • @sdedy379
    @sdedy379 3 года назад +34

    "I don't want chemical in my food."
    Well that means they not finished highschool or they not learning a thing in highschool.

    • @MawcDrums
      @MawcDrums 3 года назад +1

      @@Mutiny960 Totally. My engineering friend had to correct me when we were younger. I had said something like "This tastes like chemicals" and he was like "Everything is chemicals"

  • @paullmight42
    @paullmight42 3 года назад +4

    always heard/been told that "american cheese" wasn't actually cheese, but if it's made with a portion of actual cheese, then i guess that's not true lol

    • @Rose-jz6sx
      @Rose-jz6sx 3 года назад

      It's officially a "cheese food product" 😂

    • @robscafidi4070
      @robscafidi4070 3 года назад

      In modern marketing speak, they would probably same something like "made from the goodness of real cheese"

  • @lilacblumen
    @lilacblumen 3 года назад

    I’m a native Michigander. I grew up eating tons of Kraft American grilled cheese sandwiches and Kraft macaroni and cheese from the box with the powder packet. Loved them. Even ate slices straight. The first time I ate mac and cheese from scratch I didn’t care for it. I rarely eat Kraft now but prefer it on a burger and sometimes make Kraft Mac and cheese to eat for comfort food. Takes me back.

  • @MrDo99er
    @MrDo99er 3 года назад

    thank you for clearing up the whole Process American Cheese thing for me.
    always saw it in american shows but never really knew about it