Why do I call it miraculous? Because my husband ate it. “That’s not a miracle!”, you say – unless you know James.
My husband has an aversion bordering on phobia of most things cheese. There’s no rhyme or reason to it, as he’ll eat pizza, cheeseburgers, and cheddar and crackers. But if you put fondue, alfredo, movie theatre nachos – pretty much anything with a cheesy ‘sauce’ in front of him, he turns green around the gills and holds his nose.
On one of our first trips together back to the US after living in England, I made the mistake of having him try Kraft Mac n’ Cheese. You know what I’m talking about – the blue box. He didn’t swallow, he gagged, and from then on, referred to the stuff as ‘The Ming’. If you know a Brit or two, you know that “ming” typically refers to anything that’s dirty and gross. Imagine hearing that every time you want a little bit of mac and cheese!
So now I think you can understand why James eating the mac and cheese in that photo up there is darn miraculous.
We had several friends over for Labor Day weekend, one of whom is vegetarian. Now, I’m Texan. Vegetarian is a foreign enough concept there, in Beef country, that some people actually think it means you don’t eat beef or pork – but that chicken and seafood are fair game. And they look at you funny for just that. Imagine my grandmother’s reaction when she met Natalie and found out that this person doesn’t eat any kind of meat, ever. Heehee!
Originally we were supposed to meet everyone for dinner, and after that everyone would come back to our house to stay for the weekend. Plans changed, we ended up having lunch out, which meant I had to figure out in a hurry what to feed five people dinner with very different food likes and dislikes.
So what’d I do? I opened up Pam Anderson’s Perfect One Dish Dinners. I happened to have everything on hand not only for the Shells and Cheese, but for the pulled chicken sliders Pam recommends as a side pairing too. Add a salad (we did Caesar) and we were good to go! I could keep my vegetarian AND my cheese hating husband happy.
The shells and cheese recipe was stupidly easy, and went together even quicker than my mother’s old standby that used velveeta and milk. I used Cabot Private Stock cheddar cheese, which is the closest to proper English Cheddar we can find in this country (according to James) without paying the imported prices. Plus, anything from Vermont is good.
I think using the Cabot cheese is what really lured James over to the dark side. He has an exception in his cheese rules for a good strong cheddar, and the recipe Pam gives us is not very sauce like – each shell is perfectly cheesy, but not in a goopy way.
Folks, I can’t say enough about this book. I’ve made four recipes from it now, and each one is as good as the last. It really saved me over Labor Day weekend, especially when vegetarian mains are not normally my forte. You should pick it up today.
Pam Anderson’s Shells and Cheese for Everyone
from Perfect One Dish Dinners
Salt
1 pound medium sized Pasta Shells (we used whole wheat pasta)
1 pound grated sharp Cheddar Cheese (Use Cabot, you won’t regret it)
1 container (16 oz) Cottage Cheese
1/2 c. finely grated Parmesan
1 container (16 oz) Sour Cream
Freshly ground Black Pepper
1 cup plain dry Bread Crumbs (we used Panko)
3 tablespoons chopped fresh Parsley
3 tablespoons Butter, melted
Make sure oven rack is in the lower middle position and heat oven to 350F degrees. Coat 13×9 baking dish or dutch oven (I used my Le Crueset dutch oven) with cooking spray.
Following package directions, cook entire box of pasta until just tender.
Mix cheeses and sour cream in a large bowl. Add the hot pasta and toss to coat thoroughly. Add salt and pepper to taste and transfer to casserole dish.
Mix bread crumbs, parsley, and butter together in a small bowl, and sprinkle evenly over the shells and cheese. Bake 30-35 minutes until the casserole is bubbly and crumbs are golden brown.
[wpurp-searchable-recipe]Miraculous Mac & Cheese – – – [/wpurp-searchable-recipe]
Sara
Tuesday 26th of October 2010
I've made this a few times now and it's always a hit with friends and family. I serve it with some sweetened stewed tomatoes on the side - so good! Thank you for sharing such a wonderful recipe.
Tickled Red
Monday 13th of September 2010
See all it took was a little Pam love to get your boy to cross over to the dark side. I know how you feel, there is some basic southern yummies my surfer snarls his nose at. But I am working on him darlin' ;)
Tara@SmellsLikeHome
Monday 13th of September 2010
i've totally been eying this recipe, Amber, and yours looks so good! re: Cabot (we're huge fans ourselves), have you tried the cloth bound Cabot? it's a little on the pricey side (~$20/lb at most Whole Foods) but well worth the investment for an American/Vermont cheddar made in true English style.
Amber
Monday 13th of September 2010
Tracy - Me too!
Nancy - don't you just love it? LOL.
Steff - you'd never know there's cottage cheese. Try it.
Maria - grab it on Amazon. It's only $20 over there!
Melissa - I'm with you! I LOVE all that stuff! Give this recipe a try though. James says what he loves most about it is the crispy bread crumbs on top. That's a real winner for him. Cut it into a quarter recipe and make it as a side instead of a main so that if he hates it, you haven't got buckets off the stuff :)
Melissa
Monday 13th of September 2010
My husband and your husband must be related! Not only will he not eat anything with any sort of cheese sauce, he won't eat anything creamy! No sour cream, cream cheese, cottage cheese etc.... picky, picky! I, however, love all of that stuff and this looks like a great recipe!