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Adult Mac and Cheese

5.0

(2)

Image may contain Food Pasta and Tortellini
Photo by Chelsea Kyle

Just about as easy as opening one of those little boxes of shells and powdered sauce—and a whooooole lot more delicious. Our super-quick stovetop mac and cheese borrows from the method for a classic cacio e pepe pasta, but with a bit of milk to make it extra creamy. No béchamel, no baking, just pure dairy-on-carbs joy.

What you’ll need

Recipe information

  • Yield

    4 servings

Ingredients

Kosher salt
1 lb. small or medium shells
½ cup (1 stick) chilled unsalted butter
2 tsp. coarsely ground black pepper
1 cup whole milk
5 oz. store-bought grated Parmesan

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Add a big handfuls of kosher salt to a large pot of water and bring to a boil. (You're probably tired of us saying it all the time, but, yeah: Salting your pasta water generously is the key to well-seasoned pasta, period.) Drop 1 lb. small or medium shells into boiling water and give them a good stir to be sure nothing sticks. Set a timer according to package directions for al dente.

    Step 2

    Cut 1 stick chilled unsalted butter into 8 pieces.

    Step 3

    While pasta is cooking, heat 2 Tbsp. butter and 2 tsp. freshly ground pepper in a large heavy pot or Dutch oven over medium, stirring occasionally, until butter is melted and foaming, but not browned, and pepper is fragrant, about 1 minute.

    Step 4

    Add 1 cup whole milk to butter to stop it from browning and bring to a simmer. Whisk remaining 6 Tbsp. butter into milk mixture 1 Tbsp. at a time, allowing each to fully melt before adding the next. (Doing this gradually is important—it helps to emulsify your sauce.) You may need to adjust your heat occasionally to maintain a simmer. If pasta still needs a few more minutes to cook, turn off heat under your sauce, cover pot, and keep warm.

    Step 5

    Scoop up 2 cups pasta cooking liquid with a large glass measuring cup. You're probably not going to use all of the pasta water in your sauce, but it's better to have more than you'll need.

    Step 6

    Drain pasta and add to pot with milk mixture. Return to medium heat and cook, tossing with a wooden spoon to evenly coat all shells, about 30 seconds.

    Step 7

    Add about one-third of grated Parmesan, stirring pasta vigorously with wooden spoon to melt. Add about ½ cup reserved pasta water and continue to stir until combined. Repeat this process 2 more times with remaining Parmesan. You may not need all of the pasta water, so add ½ cup at a time until pasta is very creamy and well coated. It’s always good to err on the side of looser (with a little extra pasta water) because the sauce will thicken as it cools. Give it a taste and add more salt, if needed.

    Step 8

    Divide pasta between bowls—or just heap it into one big bowl for yourself, no judgie—and serve right away.

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