Pesto & Prosciutto Macaroni and Cheese

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This is not a diet recipe. I repeat: This is not a diet recipe.

But it is really delicious. Comfort food taken to the next level. And very fitting for today’s apparent holiday: National Mac & Cheese Day. I don’t know who creates these crazy “holidays” but this is one I won’t complain about. Mac & cheese is a staple on my list of favorite things.

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There’s only one problem with mac & cheese being my favorite—I’ve never been able to make a good from-scratch mac & cheese. The milk always curdles or the cheese globs up instead of smoothly melting into a silky sauce. Just the worst. (For the record, I have been able to make a mean mac & cheese almost my whole life. But it wasn’t from scratch and I’m not sharing the secret ingredient just yet.)

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Well this year, with some training from my coworker who is a genius in the kitchen (I mean seriously, even her lunchtime sandwiches are beautiful) I’ve finally figured out how to make a delicious, gluten free cheese sauce. Since then, I’ve been experimenting with lots of different combos—I have to mix up the star of my hangovers every once in a while, you know. This combo right here combines two of my most frequent and recent food obsessions—pesto and prosciutto—in a saucy noodle dish bursting with flavor and varying textures. Tender noodles; smooth, creamy cheese sauce; zesty pesto flavor; and crisp, yet chewy, prosciutto—time to dig in.

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Pesto & Prosciutto Macaroni and Cheese
Author: 
Serves: 2
 
Ingredients
  • 1 ounce prosciutto
  • ½ cup skim milk
  • 1 ounce cream cheese
  • 1 teaspoon prepared pesto, plus more for garnish
  • 1 cup shredded cheese (I use ½ cup white cheddar and ½ cup mozzarella)
  • 4 ounces dry, gluten free pasta (about 1 cup elbows, or 1-1/2 cup rotini or penne)
Instructions
  1. Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Add salt, then the pasta and cook according to package directions.
  2. Meanwhile, chop up the prosciutto in bite-size pieces and cook over medium-heat until slightly crisp. Add in the milk, pesto and cream cheese, whisking constantly, ensuring all cream cheese melts so there are no chunks.
  3. Bring the mixture to a slight boil then whisk in the shredded cheese until melted and fully incorporated, adding more milk to your desired consistency.
  4. Once the noodles are cooked to al dente, drain and add the cooked noodles to the cheese sauce, mix, garnish with an extra dollop of pesto and serve.

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The Best Garlic Cream Cheese

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“This is a story of about how my life got flipped, turned upside down. Now I’d like to take a minute just sit right there, I’ll tell you how I fell in love with a bagel and cream cheese.” –The lesser known and less-catchy, but more delicious, version of the Prince of Bel-Air theme song. You’re welcome.

First things first: background story. Always with the background stories. I love bagels. I was raised by Jersey parents, I know bagels. Chewy, yet with a slightly crunchy crust and toasted with butter but never with cream cheese for me. But then I got my celiac diagnosis and bagels make me gain ten pounds every time I eat one, so bye-bye bagels. I went five years like this. At one point I did find a frozen bagel at the grocery store, but alas, ten pounds later, bye-bye bagels (the other, more commonly used theme song of my life).

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Then one hungover morning a friend and I were talking about bagels (a favorite pastime of mine) and it came out that he has never eaten a bagel that didn’t come out of a bag of the shelf of a grocery store. WHAT?! I calmly (well, probably not) told him that grocery store “bagels” aren’t bagels, they’re just bread with a hole in the center. And we swiftly drove to a magical (for Arizona) place I just heard about that same week: Chompie’s—a New York style deli with gluten free bagels.

Somehow through this very magical moment of introducing real bagels to a friend, I ended up buying one of Chompie’s house-made cream cheeses despite never eating cream cheese on my bagels. I chose garlic, got it home, slathered on a corner of my bagel just to test it out and oh my goodness, slathered it on the whole dang thing. This wasn’t cream cheese, this was something to heavenly to simply be called “cream cheese.” The garlic was overpowering in the best way possible. It even had a little kick from all the fresh garlic thrown in. But then a gluten knife got stuck in the container, never for me to eat again. But I craved it all week until I finally whipped it up at home.

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Let me say this: I think it’s probably illegal to even call this a recipe. It only has three ingredients and it’s so, so easy. You might be thinking, well so is buying a tub of garlic cream cheese at the store. But trust me on this, that’s not nearly as good as this fresh garlic flavor and it will only take you five minutes to whip up. Plus, I found a way to make it (slightly) healthier. Have you guys seen that new Greek yogurt cream cheese at the grocery store? It’s partially made with Greek yogurt to cut the fat and increase the protein without sacrificing flavor or texture. Greek yogurt for the wine yet again. That’s 0ne health food trend I’m never quitting.

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The Best Garlic Cream Cheese
Author: 
 
Ingredients
  • 8 oz Greek cream cheese (cream cheese and Greek yogurt, I use Green Mountain Farms)
  • 6 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  • Optional: 1 teaspoon dried garlic (I used some for garnish)
Instructions
  1. Place cream cheese, garlic and oregano in a bowl. Beat with electric beaters or stand mixer until combined and smooth.
  2. Schmear over whatever your heart desires, but you can't go wrong with a bagel!

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Mascarpone Creme Brulee

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We’re about one month overdue for a creme brulee recipe, don’t you think?

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This past weekend a couple of my friends came to the valley for vacation. I got to crash their hotel’s pool and join them for dinner and we had too much fun. We tried a new restaurant for dinner and had the weirdest experience with our waitress. My friend order steak and when I noticed it came with “cauliflower custard” I got curious and had to ask. Big mistake. This somehow flipped the waitress switch to full-on pretentious. She harshly critiqued my friends steak order and continued to back hand criticize him until we left.

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Anyway, the cauliflower custard ended up to be a huge hit—who knew cauliflower could get that smooth. It looked like cream. This somehow led to us all discussing our love for creme brulee and our deep sadness that this restaurant didn’t have any for our dessert desires. So this post really couldn’t come at a better time.

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The creamy, richness of the mascarpone cheese (hi, obsessed, not sorry) gives this smooth creme brulee with a crunch even more depth of flavor and decadence.

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Mascarpone Creme Brulee
Author: 
Serves: 2
 
Ingredients
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • ¼ cup mascarpone cheese
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 3 egg yolks
  • ¼ cup honey
  • Sugar for topping
Instructions
  1. Melt the mascarpone into the cream and bring the cream/mascarpone mix and vanilla to a boil in a saucepan over medium-high heat (give this a good whisking throughout to prevent scorching) Once boiling, remove from heat and set aside for about 15 minutes.
  2. Preheat the oven to 325 degrees.
  3. Beat the egg yolks with the honey until combined and just a bit frothy. Slowly add the cream, whisking continuously.
  4. Pour the mixture into 2 8-ounce ramekins.
  5. Place the ramekins in a water bath (place the ramekins in a pan and fill the pan with hot water so the water level reaches halfway up the ramekins). Bake for 45–50 minutes, until mostly set but still a little jiggly.
  6. Remove the ramekins from the water bath and refrigerate for at least 2 hours and up to 3 days.
  7. Just before serving, add about a teaspoon of white granulated sugar to the top of each creme and shake it around or spread evenly. Then using a culinary torch (read the instructions and warnings on your torch first) on high, burn the sugar into a crisp crust. Serve immediately.

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