SEATTLE KITCHEN

Seattle Kitchen: Seattle’s best macaroni and cheese

Jun 1, 2012, 2:31 PM | Updated: Jun 2, 2012, 12:12 pm

The Seattle Kitchen staff found themselves arguing this
week about who could make the best macaroni and cheese.

While everyone has different ideas about how the
childhood staple should be prepared, all three agree that,
no matter what your taste, Beecher’s makes the best
macaroni in Seattle.

Katie O grew up with Kraft Macaroni and Cheese and
loves the thick baked cheese taste that many restaurants
feature.

Host Thierry Rautureau says that he wasn’t raised with
macaroni and cheese at all. Although his kids like the
Annie’s
macaroni and cheese with more cheese added to it, Thierry
doesn’t like the typical recipe.

“Butter and salt and pepper was very common on pasta in
my house. I’m not a big fan of baking with cheese, it’s
more like grating cheese right on top,” says Thierry.

But he’ll make an exception for Beecher’s, which has
received numerous awards both for its cheese and for its
pasta.

Skillet gets a lot of props, Icon
Grill
has tried to make it one of their house dishes.
Beecher’s cheese, though, has taken it to a different
level on a national basis,” says co-host Tom Douglas.

Beecher’s
makes their cheese right here in Seattle at their location
in the Pike Place Market. Kroger, as well as other grocery
stores, carry Beecher’s macaroni and cheese at locations
around the country.

The famous macaroni comes in three styles: regular,
Mariachi (with roasted Anaheim chiles and vegetables) and
gluten free.

“People say ‘who makes the best macaroni and cheese.’ I
think I do. I know that’s an egotistical-maniac thing to
say, but if you go to ‘Seattle Kitchen’, my first
cookbook, there’s a recipe in there,” Tom says.

According to Tom, the trick to making really good
macaroni and cheese at home is to roast dry penne pasta in
the oven for a few minutes until it’s nut brown, at 400
degrees in the oven before boiling. His version made the
cover of Food and Wine Magazine.

“Boil it like you boil any other pasta,” says Douglas,
“And then I take the cream, and I put the cream in a pan –
reduce it a little bit – lemon zest, lots of fresh herbs
(whatever you’ve got), and then as soon as I turn the heat
off, I crumble my goat cheese into it.”

Seattle Kitchen

Don’t bore your guests with the same old boring beers and cocktails. The Seattle Kitchen Show...

Jamie Skorheim

Seattle Kitchen suggests some ‘super’ brews, cocktails for game day

The Seattle Kitchen Show observes an interesting irony about Super Bowl celebrations when it comes to food: "On the most famous sports day in America, everyone reverts to worst things to eat and drink in America," says Seattle Kitchen host and chef Tom Douglas.

9 years ago

The Seattle Kitchen Show is helping you make your Super Bowl food a spread fit for champions. (AP P...

KIRO Radio Staff

Seattle Kitchen’s guide to Super Bowl Feast Mode

For the first Seahawks Super Bowl win, it might have been acceptable to throw together some chips and dip and call it a meal, but now the team is taking it to the next level and the 12s are going to have to step up and get into Feast Mode.

9 years ago

Mmm. If you’re feeling a little green on New Year’s Day, Tom and Thierry have a few goo...

Alyssa Kleven

Food and drink to chase away your New Year’s hangover

Seattle chef Tom Douglas says that a hangover is a "mistake" that shouldn't be piled on. He doesn't believe in "hair of the dog."

9 years ago

When you wake up a little out of sorts, or maybe with a headache or a touchy stomach, what should y...

Alyssa Kleven

Eating and drinking your hangover cures

Tom Douglas thinks says that hangover, a "mistake," shouldn't be piled on to: He doesn't believe in hair of the dog. "You should feed the dog, not take the dog to the bar."

9 years ago

During a special edition of The Seattle Kitchen Show recorded in Hawaii, the chefs do their best to...

Jamie Skorheim

Seattle Kitchen takes Spam from ordinary to extraordinary

The idea of a dish including Spam being "extraordinary" might seem a stretch for some, but if anyone can take this canned mean from ordinary to extraordinary it is the Seattle Kitchen crew of Tom Douglas, Theirry Rautureau and Katie O.

10 years ago

“I always say grilling is an art, barbecue is a religion,” says Tom Douglas. With barbe...

Jamie Skorheim

Grilling secrets from Seattle Kitchen

The Seattle Kitchen staff decided there was really only one cooking technique appropriate for the holiday weekend.

10 years ago

Seattle Kitchen: Seattle’s best macaroni and cheese