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Mac and cheese!
Make a Bechamel sauce, stir in grated cheddar until it's properly cheesy, add a pinch of nutmeg and white pepper. Pour over macaroni, add more grated cheddar on top, and bake.
If I had aged Gruyere I'd mix that with the cheddar.
Is macaroni really the right word for that in this context? I'm pretty sure you don't have a elbow noodle extractor. Pappardelle, Tagliatelle, Fettuccine?
I think this needs a seasoned breadcrumb topping when you boil it.
I assumed a basic pantry for my other ingredients
The reason I made the distinction there is because I can totally accept macaroni noodles as a basic pantry item. But I was thinking make the pasta because you have the flour. I can see the confusion here. You're going to take pre-made elbows and use the flour for the cheese roux. I get it. I just wasn't seeing it at the time.
By the way, I have elbow macaroni in my pantry right now. About 2 lb worth. They are sealed up in mason jars to prevent the pantry moths from getting in.
I have never made pasta before and while I want to give it a go, I don't think I'd start just for mac and cheese.
If you have a pasta roller, it's a snap! 400g flour, 4 eggs, little oil, little salt. Form into a dough, it takes a while to come together. It's a difficult dough to work. A mixer can help. 8 minutes or so of kneading. Rest the dough an hour, roll out into sheets, and then either use the noodle attachment or cut it into noodles by hand. It honestly only takes like 15 minutes of actual hands on effort and 90 minutes of total time.
My wife has made spaetzle from scratch before. It might be one of the easiest pastas to form - just squeeze the dough through a coarse strainer for finer pieces or out of a piping bag for more coarse pieces. And a disposable plastic bag with a corner cut off works as a piping bag. I think a nice cheese sauce would work perfectly.
Just scratch made mac and cheese.
Not OP, but I would have thought a basic pantry included staples like rice, cheap dried beans, and pasta (probably elbows or shells, since they're pretty versatile).
I'd also do mac & cheese, the same as theirs, but with different seasonings: a little sauteed, minced onion or a dash of onion powder; a tiny bit of mustard for creamier cheese sauce; and a dash of black pepper.
PS: This is great! I hope you do these regularly.
More is the plan. That's why I did 001 instead of 1.
Yes, a basic pantry would include those items. Picture yourself somewhere between 1850 and 1870 living on the prairie what's in your kitchen. What can you get access to? You definitely have sugar and yeast. You probably have cinnamon. You don't have saffron or caviar. But you have all the starches like rice, bean, potatoes and flour to make pasta. You definitely have milk and butter, but you definitely don't have 9-month aged parmesan.
An Italian kitchen in 1850 would!