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What are facts about mac and cheese?

Updated: 10/7/2023
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Macaroni ("Maccheroni" in Italian) is mentioned in various medieval Italian sources, though it is not always clear whether it is a pasta shape or a prepared dish.[3] However, pasta and cheese casseroles have been recorded in cookbooks as early as the Liber de Coquina, one of the oldest medieval cookbooks. A cheese and pasta casserole known as makerouns was recorded in an English cookbook in the 14th century.[4] It was made with fresh, hand-cut pasta which was sandwiched between a mixture of melted butter and cheese. It was considered an upperclass dish even in Italy until around the 18th century.[3]

"Maccaroni" with various sauces was a fashionable food in late eighteenth century Paris. The future American president Thomas Jefferson encountered the pasta in both Paris and in northern Italy. He drew a sketch of the pasta and wrote detailed notes on the extrusion process. In 1793, he commissioned American ambassador to Paris, William Short, to purchase a machine for making it. Evidently, the machine was not suitable, as Jefferson later imported both macaroni and Parmesan cheese for his use in Monticello.[5] In 1802, Jefferson served a "macaroni pie" at a state dinner.

Since that time, the dish has been associated with America and especially the American South. A recipe called "macaroni and cheese" appeared in the 1824 cookbook "The Virginia Housewife" written by Mary Randolph, Jefferson's cousin. Randolph's recipe had three ingredients: macaroni, cheese, and butter, layered together and baked in a 400-degree F. oven. The cookbook was the most influential cookbook of the 19th century, according to culinary historian Karen Hess[citation needed]. Similar recipes for macaroni and cheese occur in the 1852 Hand-book of Useful Arts, and the 1861 Godey's Lady's Book. By the mid 1880's, cookbooks as far west as Kansas included recipes for macaroni-based casseroles.

Pasta was however, still made by hand - a laborious process that often exploited slave labor and servants. Randolph's cookbook addressed housewives in comfortable circumstances.[6] Cooking was done in kitchens kept in a separate building for reasons of safety and summer heat. At its heart was a large fireplace where cauldrons of water and broth simmered during most of the day. A brick oven used for baking was located next to the fireplace. Although the first American pasta "factory" opened in Philadelphia in 1798, most pasta factories emerged with the rapid American industrialization following the American Civil War. Crucial was the development in 1878 of the Marseilles Purifier - a device to improve semolina, the first hydraulic press in 1882, and the first steam powered mill in 1884. Also important in these developments were the influx of Italian immigrants increasing the demand in America for pasta. High class Americans would still purchase imported pasta for the snob appeal. In 1914, an artificial drying process drastically lowered prices of factory pasta. The First World War brought pasta imports to a halt, creating an opportunity for American factories. The number of pasta factories rose from 373 to 575 between 1914 and 1919.

Paralleling this was the introduction of cheesemaking factories. The first American cheesemaking factory was founded by Jesse Williams in 1851. Generic factory cheese, cheddar, became so common it was called "store cheese" or "yellow cheese." The earlier recipes cited by Randolph probably used harder cheeses such as Parmesan. These economies of scale were driven both by the move of the population to the cities and the efficiencies of the railroad.

With the lowering of price of the factory-produced product, macaroni, and thus macaroni and cheese, lost its cachet. Fashionable restaurants in New York - even Italian ones - did not serve it.[7] Food science, a new discipline from the 1890s, proclaimed fruits and vegetables were of little nutritional value and cost too much[citation needed]iets based on bread. In the 1920s, the millers promoted macaroni as "the divine food" and sponsored "eat more wheat" campaigns. It was at this time the practice of serving Swedish meatballs with buttered egg noodles emerged.

Kraft Foods introduced its packaged dry macaroni and cheese mix in 1937 with the slogan "make a meal for four in nine minutes." It was an immediate success in the US and Canada amidst the economic turmoil of the depression. During the Second World War, rationing of meat and dairy products lead to Kraft's wide popularity. During this time it also became an acceptable entree rather than a side dish. Wartime popularity of the Kraft product lead to common variations of the dish made with processed cheese in the postwar era.[8] The 1953 Better Homes and Gardens Cookbook includes a recipe for the dish with Velveeta, which had been reformulated in that year.

In Canada, the Kraft product is so popular that "Kraft Dinner" has become a generic trademark of sorts. The item is Canada's number one selling grocery item and has assumed an iconic status akin to Vegemite in Australia,[9] but is also stereotyped as a food staple for students and those in lower income levels.[10]

In the United States, the Kraft product is included on the children's menus of Applebee's and Burger King restaurants, and it is a common side or stand alone dish for microwaveable TV dinners. Michelina's, Boston Market, and Stouffer's are some of the more widespread brands. The dish still retains its Southern associations and is a common side at barbecue and soul food restaurants, but it has long held its place in higher end Southern establishments and working class cafeterias. Additional novelties include deep-fried mac and cheese found at fairs and mobile vendors (food carts).

Since the 1990s, various "gourmet" mac and cheese dishes have emerged in fine non-regional American restaurants and bistros. Since 2006, a number of restaurants operating on a fast-food model but serving only macaroni and cheese have opened in places such as New York City, Oakland, Portland, St. Louis and Vancouver, Canada

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It is an abbreviation for macaroni and cheese, which is a dish made of macaroni pasta with melted cheese on it.

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