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On Mar 4, 8:40*pm, "Dimitri" > wrote:
> Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. > > Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. > > We can't all make Mac & Cheese from scratch all the time. > > Do you doctor it up? > > How so? > > Add extra cheese, real butter, mixed veggies or leftover veggies. *How about > dicing some leftover meat or lunch meat? > > What is your secret? > > :-) > > Dimitri What I like to do is go and buy two packs of the extra cheesy one. I take the macaroni from one box, and just make regular macaroni, maybe even use them for homemade mac & cheese. Then I take the two packs of cheesy powder and use it all for one batch. The fluorescence of the cheese becomes almost blinding! |
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My mac & cheese isn't the same twice. I'm always using whatever I have
in the house. My grocery store sells cheese ends and odd ball slices of assorted cheeses all packed together for next to nothing, so I always pick up a few packages when I'm making mac & cheese. Into a pan go all the cheeses, cheddar, swiss, provolone, american, etc. a cup or two of milk, a couple tbs. of crushed garlic, onion powder and a healthy squirt of spicy mustard. When melted pour over cooked macaroni and top with 1/2" cubed leftover bread. Last night I used up the pumpernicle bread. The bread cubes topping I've been doing since my home ec class in Jr. High. It adds a lot, especially if you use a flavored bread like pumpernicle, onion, dill, garlic, etc. Bake at 35 about 45 minutes. I've also made sauce with a roux, the traditional way, but I don't find it necessary, just milk and cheeses work fine. Denise |
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Denise in NH > wrote:
> Into a pan go all the cheeses, cheddar, swiss, provolone, > american, etc. a cup or two of milk, a couple tbs. of crushed > garlic, onion powder and a healthy squirt of spicy mustard. > When melted pour over cooked macaroni and top with 1/2" cubed > leftover bread. Of the various ways to make mac & cheese, melting the cheese before combining with the macaroni is not one I have tried. I will mix the cheese and the macaroni and then either place it in the oven, or do a quick melting operation on the stovetop. The mustard sounds like a good addition. Steve |
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On Mar 4, 9:00*pm, "Pete C." > wrote:
> Dimitri wrote: > > > Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. > > > Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. > > > We can't all make Mac & Cheese from scratch all the time. > > > Do you doctor it up? > > > How so? > > > Add extra cheese, real butter, mixed veggies or leftover veggies. *How about > > dicing some leftover meat or lunch meat? > > > What is your secret? > > > :-) > > > Dimitri > > I haven't consumed any packaged mac and cheese product (Kraft or other) > in at least 20 years. I did have to prepare a batch a few years back for > some kids who had unfortunately not been exposed to real non glow in the > dark mac and cheese ![]() I don't keep it on hand, but about every two years, I get a yen for the Kraft stuff mixed with tuna, lots of milk, a can of mushroom soup - bake for 20 minutes in a casserole, then top it with tomato slices and grated cheddar. Bake another 5 minutes til cheese melts. I found this in an old Good Housekeeping cookbook. I have passed this on to many a mother whose kid hates to eat. The kids usually love it. Seems like it goes well with a Coke as the wash-down drink. |
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On Mar 5, 12:24*am, "King's Crown" > wrote:
> "Dimitri" > wrote in message > > ... > > > > > Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. > > > Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. > > > We can't all make Mac & Cheese from scratch all the time. > > > Do you doctor it up? > > > How so? > > > Add extra cheese, real butter, mixed veggies or leftover veggies. *How > > about dicing some leftover meat or lunch meat? > > > What is your secret? > > > :-) > > > Dimitri > > I stopped buying Kraft Mac & Cheese when I found Alton Brown's Stovetop Mac > & Cheese recipe. *It's fast, easy, delicious and I usually have all the > ingredients in the house. > > Stove Top Mac-n-Cheese > > Recipe courtesy Alton Brown > Serves: *6 to 8 servings > Ingredients > 1/2 pound elbow macaroni > 4 tablespoons butter > 2 eggs > 6 ounces evaporated milk > 1/2 teaspoon hot sauce > 1 teaspoon kosher salt > Fresh black pepper > 3/4 teaspoon dry mustard > 10 ounces sharp cheddar, shredded > Directions > In a large pot of boiling, salted water cook the pasta to al dente and > drain. Return to the pot and melt in the butter. Toss to coat. > Whisk together the eggs, milk, hot sauce, salt, pepper, and mustard. Stir > into the pasta and add the cheese. Over low heat continue to stir for 3 > minutes or until creamy. Got the fat gram rundown on this? Calories per serving? |
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In article >,
"Dimitri" > wrote: > Do you doctor it up? > Dimitri On the rare occasions when I fix it (for myself; HWSRN won't touch the stuff), I mostly follow the directions on the box -- using about half as much butter as they want. -- -Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ http://web.me.com/barbschaller "What you say about someone else says more about you than it does about the other person." |
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Damsel in dis Dress wrote:
> On Wed, 04 Mar 2009 22:50:39 -0600, Janet Wilder > > wrote: > >> My esophagus was all messed up from the radiation treatments. Swallowing >> was very hard and very painful. Mac and cheese was soft and slippery. >> The cream made it even more so and added some calories. I needed a lot >> of protein to heal the open wound on my stomach from the emergency >> colostomy when my colon ruptured in the midst of radiation. The mac and >> cheese with the extra cream was, for a while, the only solid food I >> could manage. Otherwise it was Boost. > > OMG! You've been through the mill, Janet! I'm glad that things have > settled down for you, and that you're feeling healthier. > > Carol > Thanks, Carol. It was pretty rough for a while, but I'm great. I guess a tough old broad like me is hard to kill. :-) |
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![]() > wrote in message ... On Mar 5, 12:24 am, "King's Crown" > wrote: > "Dimitri" > wrote in message > > ... > > > > > Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. > > > Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. > > > We can't all make Mac & Cheese from scratch all the time. > > > Do you doctor it up? > > > How so? > > > Add extra cheese, real butter, mixed veggies or leftover veggies. How > > about dicing some leftover meat or lunch meat? > > > What is your secret? > > > :-) > > > Dimitri > > I stopped buying Kraft Mac & Cheese when I found Alton Brown's Stovetop > Mac > & Cheese recipe. It's fast, easy, delicious and I usually have all the > ingredients in the house. > > Stove Top Mac-n-Cheese > > Recipe courtesy Alton Brown > Serves: 6 to 8 servings > Ingredients > 1/2 pound elbow macaroni > 4 tablespoons butter > 2 eggs > 6 ounces evaporated milk > 1/2 teaspoon hot sauce > 1 teaspoon kosher salt > Fresh black pepper > 3/4 teaspoon dry mustard > 10 ounces sharp cheddar, shredded > Directions > In a large pot of boiling, salted water cook the pasta to al dente and > drain. Return to the pot and melt in the butter. Toss to coat. > Whisk together the eggs, milk, hot sauce, salt, pepper, and mustard. Stir > into the pasta and add the cheese. Over low heat continue to stir for 3 > minutes or until creamy. Got the fat gram rundown on this? Calories per serving? Ask Alton... but why would one eat Mac & Cheese if they were worried about fat and calories? |
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Janet Wilder wrote:
> Cheryl wrote: >> >> "Janet Wilder" > wrote in message >> ... >>> >>> When I was very sick and could hardly eat anything, I ate Kraft Mac >>> and Cheese with extra heavy cream added to it. It was one of the few >>> things I could manage. >>> >> That was with tongue cancer, right? Once it got past the tongue to >> the esophagus you felt ok to eat? > > My esophagus was all messed up from the radiation treatments. > Swallowing was very hard and very painful. Mac and cheese was soft and > slippery. The cream made it even more so and added some calories. I > needed a lot of protein to heal the open wound on my stomach from the > emergency colostomy when my colon ruptured in the midst of radiation. > The mac and cheese with the extra cream was, for a while, the only > solid food I could manage. Otherwise it was Boost. One of my friends had problems with her esophagus and swallowing was too painful, her doctor prescribed an anesthetic spray for her throat. One day she was having lunch and I was rubbing an ointment on the radiation burns that were on her back, and tears were running down her cheeks, because it hurt so bad to swallow. It was all I could do to keep from crying. Janet, I am glad you are healthy and cancer-free, but it sounds like you had a really rough time of it. I hope you never, ever have to go through that again. Becca |
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![]() "Melba's Jammin'" > wrote in message ... > In article >, > "Dimitri" > wrote: >> Do you doctor it up? > >> Dimitri > > On the rare occasions when I fix it (for myself; HWSRN won't touch the > stuff), I mostly follow the directions on the box -- using about half as > much butter as they want. > -- > -Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ > http://web.me.com/barbschaller > "What you say about someone else says more > about you than it does about the other person." Here goes....My name is Sharon and I'm a KD addict....that said, I only make it about twice a year because of type 2 Diabetes....I made the store brand last weekend when we had two of our young grandsons visiting. That and hot dogs and beans...a kid friendly meal...they loved it......maybe I can get them here more often...lol...shame on me.........Sharon in Canada |
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Becca wrote:
> Janet Wilder wrote: >> Cheryl wrote: >>> >>> "Janet Wilder" > wrote in message >>> ... >>>> >>>> When I was very sick and could hardly eat anything, I ate Kraft Mac >>>> and Cheese with extra heavy cream added to it. It was one of the few >>>> things I could manage. >>>> >>> That was with tongue cancer, right? Once it got past the tongue to >>> the esophagus you felt ok to eat? >> >> My esophagus was all messed up from the radiation treatments. >> Swallowing was very hard and very painful. Mac and cheese was soft and >> slippery. The cream made it even more so and added some calories. I >> needed a lot of protein to heal the open wound on my stomach from the >> emergency colostomy when my colon ruptured in the midst of radiation. >> The mac and cheese with the extra cream was, for a while, the only >> solid food I could manage. Otherwise it was Boost. > > One of my friends had problems with her esophagus and swallowing was too > painful, her doctor prescribed an anesthetic spray for her throat. One > day she was having lunch and I was rubbing an ointment on the radiation > burns that were on her back, and tears were running down her cheeks, > because it hurt so bad to swallow. It was all I could do to keep from > crying. > > Janet, I am glad you are healthy and cancer-free, but it sounds like you > had a really rough time of it. I hope you never, ever have to go > through that again. > Thank you, Becca. I hope I never do, either. |
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On Mar 4, 7:40 pm, "Dimitri" > wrote:
> Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. > > Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. > > Dimitri The very odor of the sauce makes me puke. Sorry. Someone else has to fix it for the grandkids when they want it for lunch at my house. I didn't even know what "blue box" meant until I started reading this group - I never bought it for the kids when they were small - 'course, they're 43 and 40 now, so maybe it wasn't being manufactured yet. Real mac 'n cheese takes so little time - not as little as the blue box, but little enough. Just plan for it about 45 minutes ahead of time. N. |
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Dimitri wrote:
> Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. > > Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. > > We can't all make Mac & Cheese from scratch all the time. > > Do you doctor it up? > > How so? > > Add extra cheese, real butter, mixed veggies or leftover veggies. How > about dicing some leftover meat or lunch meat? > > What is your secret? I can tell you that I don't use it. My son liked it when he was young, but when I started making it from scratch he lost his taste for Kraft. Sure, it takes longer to make macaroni and cheese from scratch, and it costs more, but the real stuff is good. |
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I used to eat it once in a great while. ONLY the blue box and it had
to be at least whole milk (or half and half) an some extra butter. Then a few years ago one of my work colleagues made it and I ended up working late and had to eat his. He was a heart patient on a low sodium low fat diet and he made it by dumping all the pasta from 6 boxed in a vat of (unsalted) boileng water. Then he stirred the cheese packets into the (skim) milk. After the pasta waaaaaaaaaaay beyond al dente, he drained it and pourd the cheesy skim milk on top and stirred like hell. Yum . . . yellow wallpaper paste. Haven't touched it since. Lynn in Fargo |
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![]() heron > wrote in message ... > > "Dimitri" > wrote in message > ... > > Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. > > > > Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. > > > > We can't all make Mac & Cheese from scratch all the time. > > > > Do you doctor it up? > > > > How so? > > > > Add extra cheese, real butter, mixed veggies or leftover veggies. How > > about dicing some leftover meat or lunch meat? > > > > What is your secret? > > > > :-) > > > > Dimitri > When you could buy Kraft powdered American cheese separately, it worked > somewhat better to make it on your own, choosing your own noodles, etc.I > wish I could find powdered American or Cheddar cheese sold separately. I > haven't been able to. If anyone knows of a source I'd sure appreciate it. > > Ed > Frontier Natural Products www.frontiercoop.com has powdered mild cheddar and also white cheddar. JonquilJan Learn something new every day As long as you are learning, you are living When you stop learning, you start dying |
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On Wed, 4 Mar 2009 17:40:38 -0800, "Dimitri" >
wrote: >Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. > >Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. > >We can't all make Mac & Cheese from scratch all the time. > >Do you doctor it up? My little boys (recent pictures here http://www.flickr.com/photos/35699999@N06/ ) eat the blue box mac and cheese at least once a week at home. They love it as is. We usually eat the Aldi version. I have never noticed a difference between Kraft and the store brands. I have just about lost my taste for boxed mac and cheese. When we do want add ins, I add: tuna hot dogs peas broccoli ham leftover chili -- very good leftover taco meat -- very good Tara |
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On Mar 4, 8:54*pm, pamjd > wrote:
> I like it with cheap cut up hot dogs and red pepper flakes. > But I buy generic and doctor it up. And you just advertised that fact to the whole world. --Bryan |
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On Mar 4, 10:44*pm, Andy > wrote:
> Dimitri said... > > > Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. > > > Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. > > > We can't all make Mac & Cheese from scratch all the time. > > > Do you doctor it up? > > > How so? > > > Add extra cheese, real butter, mixed veggies or leftover veggies. *How > > about dicing some leftover meat or lunch meat? > > > What is your secret? > > I'm a big box o' blue fan. > > I routinely change the shape of m&c with a small can of tuna and an > avocado! > That is avocado abuse. I should report you to these folks: http://www.avocado.org/ > I'm in complete agreement! -- Andy's Evil Twin. --Bryan |
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"Nancy2" > wrote in message
... > On Mar 4, 7:40 pm, "Dimitri" > wrote: >> Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. >> >> Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. >> >> Dimitri > > > The very odor of the sauce makes me puke. Sorry. Someone else has to > fix it for the grandkids when they want it for lunch at my house. I > didn't even know what "blue box" meant until I started reading this > group - I never bought it for the kids when they were small - 'course, > they're 43 and 40 now, so maybe it wasn't being manufactured yet. > > Real mac 'n cheese takes so little time - not as little as the blue > box, but little enough. Just plan for it about 45 minutes ahead of > time. > > N. The steps for my mother's (Velveeta <gasp>) mac & cheese are so similar to the ones on the blue box I wonder why people even bother. Price, maybe? You still have to boil the macaroni, melt butter, add milk and stir in the packet of cheese. In my (and my mom's) case, I stir in chunks of Velveeta instead and stir until it's melted. Then stir it into cooked drained macaroni. Same steps, pretty much the same amount of time. (I do go the next step and bake mine with breadcrumbs on top.) So it must be a cost thing. Otherwise I just don't see the appeal of powdered cheese sauce. Jill |
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On Wed, 4 Mar 2009 17:40:38 -0800, "Dimitri" >
wrote: >Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. > >Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. > >We can't all make Mac & Cheese from scratch all the time. > >Do you doctor it up? > >How so? > >Add extra cheese, real butter, mixed veggies or leftover veggies. How about >dicing some leftover meat or lunch meat? > >What is your secret? > >:-) > >Dimitri Butter - plenty of it (or non-transfat margarine) Can of tuna Can of tomatoes Hard-boiled eggs, chopped |
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![]() "Dave Smith" > wrote in message m... > Dimitri wrote: >> Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. >> >> Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. >> >> We can't all make Mac & Cheese from scratch all the time. >> >> Do you doctor it up? >> >> How so? >> >> Add extra cheese, real butter, mixed veggies or leftover veggies. How >> about dicing some leftover meat or lunch meat? >> >> What is your secret? > > I can tell you that I don't use it. My son liked it when he was young, but > when I started making it from scratch he lost his taste for Kraft. Sure, > it takes longer to make macaroni and cheese from scratch, and it costs > more, but the real stuff is good. I have never had Kraft macaroni and cheese. |
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On Thu, 05 Mar 2009 19:04:19 -0500, Mark A.Meggs
> wrote: >On Wed, 4 Mar 2009 17:40:38 -0800, "Dimitri" > >wrote: > >>Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. >> >>Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. >> >>We can't all make Mac & Cheese from scratch all the time. >> >>Do you doctor it up? >> >>How so? >> >>Add extra cheese, real butter, mixed veggies or leftover veggies. How about >>dicing some leftover meat or lunch meat? >> >>What is your secret? >> >>:-) >> >>Dimitri > >Butter - plenty of it (or non-transfat margarine) >Can of tuna >Can of tomatoes >Hard-boiled eggs, chopped Plus frozen peas if any are available Season with pepper, celery seed, dried onoin, Coleman's mustard powder, and some sweet paprika. - Mark |
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![]() "Damsel in dis Dress" > wrote in message ... > On Wed, 4 Mar 2009 17:40:38 -0800, "Dimitri" > > wrote: > >>Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. >> >>Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. > > I won't touch the stuff. Believe it! > > Carol I refuse to believe it. So there! ;-) LOL Dimitri |
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In article >,
"jmcquown" > wrote: > "Nancy2" > wrote in message > ... > > On Mar 4, 7:40 pm, "Dimitri" > wrote: > >> Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. > >> > >> Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. > >> > >> Dimitri > > > > > > The very odor of the sauce makes me puke. Sorry. Someone else has to > > fix it for the grandkids when they want it for lunch at my house. I > > didn't even know what "blue box" meant until I started reading this > > group - I never bought it for the kids when they were small - 'course, > > they're 43 and 40 now, so maybe it wasn't being manufactured yet. > > > > Real mac 'n cheese takes so little time - not as little as the blue > > box, but little enough. Just plan for it about 45 minutes ahead of > > time. > > > > N. > > > The steps for my mother's (Velveeta <gasp>) mac & cheese are so similar to > the ones on the blue box I wonder why people even bother. Price, maybe? > You still have to boil the macaroni, melt butter, add milk and stir in the > packet of cheese. In my (and my mom's) case, I stir in chunks of Velveeta > instead and stir until it's melted. Then stir it into cooked drained > macaroni. Same steps, pretty much the same amount of time. (I do go the > next step and bake mine with breadcrumbs on top.) So it must be a cost > thing. Otherwise I just don't see the appeal of powdered cheese sauce. > > Jill I never thought of that. Two naughty treats in one. :-) I adore velveeta and it was on sale at Wal-mart this morning for less than $5.00 for the #2 box. I did not buy any right now tho' just because the diet is currently going so well. <sigh> -- Peace! Om I find hope in the darkest of days, and focus in the brightest. I do not judge the universe. -- Dalai Lama |
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On Thu, 05 Mar 2009 13:45:52 -0600, Janet Wilder
> wrote: >Damsel in dis Dress wrote: >> On Wed, 04 Mar 2009 22:50:39 -0600, Janet Wilder >> > wrote: >> >>> My esophagus was all messed up from the radiation treatments. Swallowing >>> was very hard and very painful. Mac and cheese was soft and slippery. >>> The cream made it even more so and added some calories. I needed a lot >>> of protein to heal the open wound on my stomach from the emergency >>> colostomy when my colon ruptured in the midst of radiation. The mac and >>> cheese with the extra cream was, for a while, the only solid food I >>> could manage. Otherwise it was Boost. >> >> OMG! You've been through the mill, Janet! I'm glad that things have >> settled down for you, and that you're feeling healthier. > >Thanks, Carol. It was pretty rough for a while, but I'm great. I guess a >tough old broad like me is hard to kill. :-) I'm glad you're made of such sturdy stuff! Carol -- Change "invalid" to JamesBond's agent number to reply. |
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On Thu, 5 Mar 2009 19:07:19 -0500, "cybercat" >
wrote: >I have never had Kraft macaroni and cheese. Count your blessings. ![]() Carol -- Change "invalid" to JamesBond's agent number to reply. |
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Tara wrote:
> > My little boys (recent pictures here > http://www.flickr.com/photos/35699999@N06/ ) eat the blue box mac and They are adorable! |
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![]() "jmcquown" > wrote in message ... > "Nancy2" > wrote in message > ... >> On Mar 4, 7:40 pm, "Dimitri" > wrote: >>> Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. >>> >>> Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. >>> >>> Dimitri > > > The steps for my mother's (Velveeta <gasp>) mac & cheese are so similar to > the ones on the blue box I wonder why people even bother. Price, maybe? <snip> > Jill In all honesty I have NEVER seen a kid refuse the blue box Mac & cheese. There must be something in the salty balance and/or texture. (Velveeta <gasp>) Sorry no Gasping allowed! Dimitri |
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On Thu, 5 Mar 2009 16:27:38 -0800, "Dimitri" >
wrote: >"Damsel in dis Dress" > wrote in message .. . >> On Wed, 4 Mar 2009 17:40:38 -0800, "Dimitri" > >> wrote: >> >>>Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. >>> >>>Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. >> >> I won't touch the stuff. Believe it! > >I refuse to believe it. > >So there! > >;-) > >LOL > >Dimitri Notice the lack of an orange ring around my mouth. SEE??? Carol, who grew up on Betty Crocker's macaroni and cheese with Land O' Lakes American cheese. Carol -- Change "invalid" to JamesBond's agent number to reply. |
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![]() "Nexis" > wrote in message ... > > "Dimitri" > wrote in message > ... >> Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. >> >> Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. >> >> We can't all make Mac & Cheese from scratch all the time. >> >> Do you doctor it up? >> >> How so? >> >> Add extra cheese, real butter, mixed veggies or leftover veggies. How >> about dicing some leftover meat or lunch meat? >> >> What is your secret? >> >> :-) >> >> Dimitri > > Ok, you can't tell anyone this...it has to be our secret. Promise? OK I promise - it'll be our secret. BTW last trip to Wally World - 50 cents a box. Dimitri |
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![]() "Tara" > wrote in message ... > On Wed, 4 Mar 2009 17:40:38 -0800, "Dimitri" > > wrote: > >>Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. >> >>Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. >> >>We can't all make Mac & Cheese from scratch all the time. >> >>Do you doctor it up? > > My little boys (recent pictures here > http://www.flickr.com/photos/35699999@N06/ ) eat the blue box mac and > cheese at least once a week at home. They love it as is. We > usually eat the Aldi version. I have never noticed a difference > between Kraft and the store brands. <snip> Good Looking boys. Dimitri |
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On Thu, 05 Mar 2009 18:35:06 -0600, Janet Wilder
> wrote: >Tara wrote: > >> My little boys (recent pictures here >> http://www.flickr.com/photos/35699999@N06/ ) eat the blue box mac and > >They are adorable! They sure are. ![]() I'm getting old! Carol -- Change "invalid" to JamesBond's agent number to reply. |
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In article >,
"Dimitri" > wrote: > "Tara" > wrote in message > ... > > On Wed, 4 Mar 2009 17:40:38 -0800, "Dimitri" > > > wrote: > > > >>Kraft Mac & Cheese has been a staple for YEARS. > >> > >>Don't tell me you don't use it I don't believe you. > >> > >>We can't all make Mac & Cheese from scratch all the time. > >> > >>Do you doctor it up? > > > > My little boys (recent pictures here > > http://www.flickr.com/photos/35699999@N06/ ) eat the blue box mac and > > cheese at least once a week at home. They love it as is. We > > usually eat the Aldi version. I have never noticed a difference > > between Kraft and the store brands. > > <snip> > > Good Looking boys. > > Dimitri They sure are. :-) They remind me of my two nephews. Which reminds me, I've got to try to remember to pick up some fruit on the way home from work tomorrow morning. I'm babysitting again this weekend. :-) They adore fresh fruit for snacking. -- Peace! Om I find hope in the darkest of days, and focus in the brightest. I do not judge the universe. -- Dalai Lama |
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![]() Melba's Jammin' wrote: > In article >, > "Dimitri" > wrote: > > Do you doctor it up? > > > Dimitri > > On the rare occasions when I fix it (for myself; HWSRN won't touch the > stuff), I mostly follow the directions on the box -- using about half as > much butter as they want. Doesn't hide that ineffably "chalky" taste... ;-) -- Best Greg |
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Janet Wilder wrote:
> Damsel in dis Dress wrote: >> On Wed, 04 Mar 2009 22:50:39 -0600, Janet Wilder >> > wrote: >> >>> My esophagus was all messed up from the radiation treatments. >>> Swallowing was very hard and very painful. Mac and cheese was soft >>> and slippery. The cream made it even more so and added some calories. >>> I needed a lot of protein to heal the open wound on my stomach from >>> the emergency colostomy when my colon ruptured in the midst of >>> radiation. The mac and cheese with the extra cream was, for a while, >>> the only solid food I could manage. Otherwise it was Boost. >> >> OMG! You've been through the mill, Janet! I'm glad that things have >> settled down for you, and that you're feeling healthier. >> >> Carol >> > > Thanks, Carol. It was pretty rough for a while, but I'm great. I guess a > tough old broad like me is hard to kill. :-) Well, I am very glad you overcame this, Janet. What an awful thing to go through! -- Jean B. |
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Tara wrote:
> My little boys (recent pictures here > http://www.flickr.com/photos/35699999@N06/ ) eat the blue box mac and > cheese at least once a week at home. What handsome young men, you have. :-) Becca |
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