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Mac 'n Cheese ratings

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    Posted: 25 March 2011 at 12:29

Macaroni and Cheese

Published April 1, 2011. From Cook's Country.

We tasted 25 boxed and frozen versions of mostly clumpy, gloppy, wimpy mac and cheese. Were there any we’d actually eat?

Although making macaroni and cheese from scratch isn’t hard, many busy parents (and hungry, budget-conscious college students) still opt for the convenience of box mixes and frozen dinners—and their numbers are growing. Sales have risen 25 percent over the past four years, according to SymphonyIRI Group, a Chicago-based market research firm. New brands and varieties (Kraft alone offers more than 50 kinds) have exploded onto the market. Are they any good?

To narrow down our choices, we conducted two preliminary taste-offs of Kraft and Annie’s, companies that offer a dizzying array of product styles. We plucked the winners from among 19 of their best sellers and added other brands to round out our list, including two brands of frozen dinners; after all, what’s more convenient than heat and serve? We carefully followed package instructions, microwaving the frozen dinners (much quicker than baking), and asked 22 cooks and editors at America’s Test Kitchen to weigh in.

“Revolting.” That’s how they judged most of the brands in our blind tasting. We found just three brands we would even consider eating.

The so-called “cheese sauce” was one of several features that distinguished winners from losers. Our favorite reinforced its sauce with blue and cheddar cheeses, and all our top choices used liquid sauce, which was creamy and suitably clingy. Brands that relied on a cheese-powder packet (to which the cook adds milk and/or margarine) tasted “artificial” and were “chalky” and “thin.” Also, dry noodles triumphed; frozen dinners turned pasta into mush. Both elbows and shells were acceptable (confession: we skipped Kraft’s “SpongeBob SquarePants” shape).

Our winner requires the cook to make a milk-based cheese sauce, substituting a seasoning packet for flour and a cheese sauce for grated cheese. The effort is slightly less than from-scratch, and so is the flavor (though we did like the crumb topping). Only one other brand earned a recommended rating. We found a third acceptable, with reservations. The other five brands are not worth eating, even if the kids are screaming.

Product Tested Total Cooking Time Type of Cheese Sauce The Cook Adds Price*
Recommended
Kraft Homestyle Macaroni & Cheese Dinner Classic Cheddar Cheese Sauce

The best of the 11 Kraft varieties we tried and the best overall, this creamy, flavorful macaroni tasted the most like homemade. Tasters really liked the breadcrumb topping and praised the “thick” sauce for its “real” cheese flavor.

Approximately 20 minutes Liquid 2% milk, unsalted butter $2 for 12.6-ounce bag
Recommended
Kraft Velveeta Original Shells & Cheese

This cheese flavor was strong and rich, the sauce nice and thick. Many of our tasters instantly recognized the distinct taste of Velveeta. Some complained that the cheese became waxy if it sat around even briefly.

Approximately 10 minutes Liquid Nothing $2 for 12-ounce box
Recommended with Reservations
Annie’s Deluxe Shells & Real Aged Cheddar

The small shells sometimes clumped, cooking unevenly and leaving some rubbery. Tasters liked the initial cheddar flavor, but many detected an off-putting aftertaste.

Approximately 12 minutes Liquid Nothing $3.99 for 11-ounce box
Not Recommended
Stouffer’s Macaroni & Cheese Family Size

Some tasters praised the good cheddar flavor; others tasted only salt. But our biggest gripe was the “smushy,” “gloppy” texture. We cooked it in the microwave for speed.

23 minutes in the microwave, 75 minutes in a 375ºF oven Already incorporated Nothing $5.99 for 40 ounces
Not Recommended
Back to Nature Macaroni & Cheese

Despite the addition of milk and butter, tasters found this brand “pasty” and “powdery,” with cheese that was “chemical-y,” strangely “sweet,” and wan. As one taster put it, “It was as if the mac and cheese was depressed.”

Approximately 8 minutes Powdered Low-fat milk, unsalted butter $2.19 for 6.5-ounce box
Not Recommended
Kraft Macaroni & Cheese Dinner Original

“The Cheesiest” was plastered across the box, but this classic mac and cheese was everything but. Tasters jotted down “sweet,” “bitter,” “fake,” “fishy,” “sour,” and more—but nary a “cheesy.” Kraft may eat up 80 percent of the dry macaroni-and-cheese market, but this blue box we all know from childhood was just plain awful.

Approximately 8 minutes Powdered Margarine, 2% milk $1.15 for 7.25-ounce box
Not Recommended
Pasta Roni Cheddar Macaroni

Easy-peasy to make: You bring water to a boil, add the pasta and seasoning packet, simmer, and let stand. No draining, no fuss, and . . . oops, no flavor! The cream-colored powder turned a disturbing neon yellow. Also disturbing—the flavorless, “rubbery, mushy mass” of “hideous orange elbows.”

Approximately 16 minutes Powdered Nothing $1.59 for 5.3-ounce box
Not Recommended
Banquet: Macaroni & Cheese Meal

This heat-and-eat frozen dinner was “bland” and “squishy” with a “weird plastic” aftertaste. Described as “flabby” and with zero cheese flavor, the closest it came to getting a compliment was “Tastes like a Cheez Doodle.”

6 minutes in the microwave, 28 minutes in a 350ºF oven Already incorporated Nothing $1.25 for 8 ounces


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 25 March 2011 at 13:02
Beautiful information and post for the forum~ thanks! I have to agree with the test on several counts. One, the Back To Nature brand stuff. If there was ever a most fake, disgusting (and their use of the word "wan" was deliciously appropriate  Smile ) stuff then this is it. I threw the entire package away after one forkfull.
 
Two, those velveeta shells and that gooey pouch sauce.....excellent in my book! Some of the cheesiest, richest, stickiest comfort food around, but expensive. Their complaint that the cheese "became waxy" after sitting around.......c'mon people, what did you expect? It's Velveeta, not Danish Havarti we're talking about here! Sheesh!
 
Never tried any of the others, and the idea of a frozen mac & cheese is too weird for me to ever want to try. To me that screams "instant mush once hot".
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote MomInAnApron Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 25 March 2011 at 13:23
Originally posted by Rivet Rivet wrote:

Their complaint that the cheese "became waxy" after sitting around.......c'mon people, what did you expect? It's Velveeta, not Danish Havarti we're talking about here! Sheesh!
 


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Hoser Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 25 March 2011 at 14:27
I have to admit...I love Stouffer's frozen mac n cheese...just don't incinerate it.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote TasunkaWitko Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19 April 2011 at 09:21
velveeta shells and cheese is probably at the top of the list of what we can get around here, although kraft is also good.
 
probably the best tasting macaroni and cheese that i've ever had (besides homemade) was a brand called mission macaroni and cheese. the cheese sauce had a really full, rich flavour, differnt than any other, and so much better in a way that i can't quite describe. i don't know if it is made anymore, but i sure can't find it in my area. if anyone finds any, send me some!
 
 
as for frozen, some are ok, and some are terrible. stouffers, which i agree is one of the best, is a little mushy, but not as bad as one would think. somehow the texture works well with the flavour and the topping, in my opinion.
 
call me crazy, but what i really like to do is save the macaroni for some kind of pasta salad, and then use the powdered cheese packages to sprinkle on popcorn, potatoes etc.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19 April 2011 at 10:11
Hey Ron, do you think it might have been Mission Foods, those guys that make tortillas and the taco bell stuff at the grocery store? That logo-word "mission" looks very much like the one they used to have.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote TasunkaWitko Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19 April 2011 at 10:16
it's possible, john - i checked their website and found only mexican-themed products. if it is the same company, it looks like the macaroni and cseese is now defunct, whouch would be a real tragedy.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote pitrow Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 18 April 2012 at 18:13
I may be just strange, but the only mac and cheese I like is the original kraft mac and cheese in the blue box. Of all the others that I've tried, I just don't care for them.

Throw a little onion powder in the water while the mac is boiling, and it's yummy. Had some just last night as a matter of fact.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Rod Franklin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19 April 2012 at 06:22
“sweet,” “bitter,” “fake,” “fishy,” “sour,” All reviews of the same product, I assume from the same batch and tasted at the same time by different tasters. Does any one else find this worthy of an eyebrow raise? How can one taster find a product sweet, and another taster find the same product sour? Makes me think there was indeed something less than scientific going on and leads me to suspect the entire exercise.

Kraft original in the blue box with 4 all beef hotdogs cut into 3/4" pieces boiled along with the macaroni, then a drained can of Del Monte cut green beans tossed in with all the rest after the hotdogs and macaroni is done and drained. A little extra milk and, believe it or not, you can even get a kid who doesn't like vegetables to like this stuff.

I can't say I've tried 25 kinds of mac n cheez. I just don't like the stuff that much to care. But I don't immediately trust these studies. Can you imagine the same exercise with canned tomatoes? Gah! 
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